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Wednesday, April 30th, 2008
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3:22p - [BRIEF NOTE] Changing Canadian economic balances
The Canadian economic landscape is shaking. From the Canadian Press.
Newfoundland and Labrador, considered for generations the poor cousin of Confederation, heralded a new era of economic independence Tuesday with a budget that delivers a substantial surplus and promises for the first time to pull it off the list of "have-not" provinces.
The new economic strength of the once hard-up province is fuelled by the soaring price of oil and carries meaning that goes beyond numbers for many Newfoundlanders.
There's pride involved.
"We were always the poor cousin of Confederation," Finance Minister Tom Marshall told a news conference before tabling the budget.
"Many of you, I guess like me, when you travelled the country, you would hear comments about people in this province ... being on welfare and other provinces having to provide us with revenues. Those days are over."
From Canwest.
Ontario is only two years away, and maybe less, from becoming a have-not province, TD Bank warned Tuesday.
And the added cost paying equalization payments to the giant have-not province could be the straw that pushes the federal government back into deficit for the first time in more than a decade, TD economist Derek Burleton, one of the author's of the report said in an interview.
"This would really add to the cost of the program," Burleton said. "There's no doubt that ... it's one more factor that could tip the federal government into deficit down the road."
Ontario is projected to qualify for equalization payments of $400 million in the 2010-11 fiscal year and $1.3 billion in fiscal year 2011-12 10-11, according to TD's economic and revenue projections.
Based on the data to date, Ontario would not qualify for a payment next year but that could easily change, it added.
[. . .]
The increase in commodity prices, which has boosted the revenue-raising ability of other provinces, especially in the West, plus the inclusion of Alberta's fiscal capacity under the newly reformed equalization rules, have combined to lower the bar for qualifying for equalization payments, it explained.
At the same time, commodity-importing Ontario has been hurt by the commodities boom, which has also boosted the value of the Canadian dollar, making its manufactured exports more expensive and less competitive.
"It is not a coincidence that Ontario's recent slippage in terms of relative standard of living has occurred in lockstep with the rise in the loonie, soaring energy prices and heightened competition, all of which have created a perfect storm for manufacturers," the report observed. "However, a closer look reveals that the relative decline is not so much a story of Ontario weakness as it is of booming economic strength in Canada's commodity-based economies."
And it's not that Ontario's living standard, measured as GDP per capita, has fallen but that the three per cent annual increase since 2002 has not kept up with the five to eight per cent gains in the four western provinces, and what has been an even greater double-digit annual gain in Newfoundland and Labrador.
Since 2002 Ontario's GDP per capita, a measure of living standards, has fallen from seven per cent above the national average and second place among the provinces behind Alberta, to what last year was two per cent below national average and fourth place among the provinces.
Out-migration is still continuing from a Newfoundland where oil wealth is distributing unevenly, and Ontario's will still be the largest economy of any province. Even so, this all is an unprecedented power shift in the economy of Canada, for nearly a century after Confederation dominated by the rich and industrialized central Canadian provinces of Ontario and Québec.
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3:28p - [URBAN NOTE] Cowgirl
I passed a woman using a pay phone midtown last week. I was disturbed by the sight of her. She was dressed expensively and I assume fashionably, and she had what I think was a nice hairdo, but she looked painfully thin, with a pinched face, stick-like arms, and a waist that I'm sure I could wrap my two hands around and cover completely. I couldn't help but wonder if she was cold all the time.
- Are you going to the rodeo? she asked her telephonic correspondent.
- Are you going to the rodeo? she asked again.
Finally, frustrated.
- Are you going to the rodeo? You know, the cowboy thing.
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7:06p - [MUSIC] Boney M, "Rasputin"
I was dancing at Zipperz very early Monday morning with Jerry when Boney M's 1978 hit song "Rasputin" came on. The dance floor erupted in cheers.
I first heard "Rasputin" in Grade Canada's intervention in the Russian Civil War and the Winnipeg General Strike of 1919. The charismatic Grigori Rasputin, Mr. Morrison said, helped contribute to the breakdown of the Russian Empire and to the rise of socialist radicalism all over the world, including Canada, hence his choice of this background music.
He wasn't half-wrong. As pointed out at the BBC's h2g2 site, while the awkwardly phrased the song's lyrics were actually reasonably accurate.
There lived a certain man in Russia long ago He was big and strong, in his eyes a flaming glow Most people looked at him with terror and with fear But to Moscow chicks he was such a lovely dear He could preach the bible like a preacher Full of ecstacy and fire But he also was the kind of teacher Women would desire
[. . .]
He ruled the Russian land and never mind the czar But the kasachok he danced really wunderbar In all affairs of state he was the man to please But he was real great when he had a girl to squeeze For the queen he was no wheeler dealer Though she'd heard the things he'd done She believed he was a holy healer Who would heal her son
The song is pure cheese, of course, with the aforementioned awkward lyrics and the Boney M choruses and the Frank Farian disco music which, it turns out, was pirated from the folk songs of the Ottoman Empire. Some of the characteristic melodies of "Rasputin" are recognizable in Eartha Kitt's "Uska Dara."
Still, why shouldn't Farian have done this? If anything, our era is one of bricolage. What's wrong with enjoying whatever products we enjoy? It is interesting how Boney M makes use of southeastern European/Anatolian folk music to describe Russia. The Orientalization of Russia, perhaps?
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