1-minute read
Do we still need to regulate telephone services?
MEI’s Economic Note on the CRTC’s regulation of telecommunications.
7-minute read
Embraer e Bombardier
Bombardier and Embraer can compete without government support.
6-minute read
Keep subsidies out of aircraft competition
Bombardier and Embraer can compete without government support.
7-minute read
Coûteuses subventions – Bombardier et Embraer pourraient fort bien rivaliser sans aide gouvernementale
Bombardier and Embraer can compete without government support.
3-minute read
Contrainte aux commerçants
Store owners facing more and more restrictions on the presentation of tobacco products.
4-minute read
Téléphonie: la réglementation anticoncurrentielle du CRTC
Publication of an Economic Note on the CRTC’s regulation of telecommunications.
4-minute read
Competitive telecoms need no CRTC shield
Publication of an Economic Note on the CRTC’s regulation of telecommunications.
1-minute read
Do we still need to regulate telephone services?
In the field of telecommunications, the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) protected monopolies against entry when it should not have, and it now grants privileges to their competitors while there are no more economic reasons to do so. Even if it could be argued that telephone services were a natural monopoly before the development of the new telecommunications technology, this is not the case any more, and it seems that the CRTC no longer has any reason to intervene in this sector. A good economic case can be made for a real and complete deregulation of telecommunications in Canada.
1-minute read
Drug Price Controls and Pharmaceutical Innovation
Drug costs have undeniably risen more quickly than other health care costs. The share of drugs in overall Canadian health care spending went from 10.8% in 1988 to 15.7% in 2001. However, the higher drug expenses facing Canada’s health care systems are not due to price increases imposed by multinational pharmaceutical firms. Various factors explain the growth in drug spending.
3-minute read
Avantages de la concurrence
The Canadian telecommunications’ sector and the CRTC regulations.