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THE ECONOMIC PERFORMANCE OF QUEBEC: FACTS AND CHALLENGES

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THE ECONOMIC PERFORMANCE OF QUEBEC: FACTS AND CHALLENGES Marcel Boyer, Ph.D. President and CEO of CIRANO Professor of economics, University of Montreal – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: THE ECONOMIC PERFORMANCE OF QUEBEC: FACTS AND CHALLENGES


1
THE ECONOMIC PERFORMANCE OF QUEBEC FACTS AND
CHALLENGES
  • Marcel Boyer, Ph.D.
  • President and CEO of CIRANO
  • Professor of economics, University of Montreal

2
I. Important FactsII. Lessons to Be
DrawnIII. Revolution and Changes a)
Analytical Bases b) Programs
3
FACT 1A GROWTH RATE (REAL GDP)
  • 1981-99 1990-99
  • Québec 2,1 (45,2) 2,0
  • ROC 2,8 (64,2) 2,6

4
FACT 1BPOPULATION GROWTH
  • 1981-99 1991-99
  • Québec 12,2 4,0
  • ROC 26,7 10,4

5
FACT 2AGDP PER CAPITA
  • 1981-99 1991-99
  • Québec 29,5 17,7
  • ROC 29,6 16,4

6
FACT 2BLIVING STANDARD IN 25 YEARS
  • Québec 26 213 to 43 199 / 37 522
  • ROC 29 708 to 56 793 / 42 601
  • Lag 13,3 to 23,9 / 13,5
  • DIFF(4) 13 980 to 54 376 / 20 316

7
FACT 3 JOB CREATION
  • 1981-99
  • Que 20.4 ROC 31.3 USA 33.0
  • 1990-99
  • Que 6.9 ROC 12.4 USA 12.4

8
FACT 4 POPULATION vs. JOBS CREATED QUE/CAN
  • 1981-90 25.7 vs. 19.6
  • 1990-99 24.5 vs. 15.0

9
FACT 5 JOB CREATION DEFICIT 1981-99
  • 349,000 jobs
  • 61.4 more than the 568,000 jobs created.

10
FACT 6 FULL-TIME JOBS
  • 1981-90 Que 9.2 vs. ROC 14.2
  • 1990-99 Que 5.2 vs. ROC 10.5
  • Que/Can share From 18.0 to 13.9

11
FACT 7 EMPLOYMENT RATE 1996-99
  • Quebec 55.5
  • ROC 60.8
  • USA 64.0
  • Deficit of 465,000 jobs (14)
  • Under-estimated unemployment rate

12
FACT 8 EMPLOYMENT RATE 55-64 YEAR-OLD
MEN1976-1996/99
  • Quebec 71.7 to 49.8 - 22 pts
  • ROC 74.3 to 55.7 - 19 pts
  • USA 71.2 to 65.5 - 6 pts

13
FACT 9
  • EMPLOYMENT INS. CLAIMANTS ROC 21,6 per
    1 000 Quebec 33,1 per 1 000
    (53,2 )
  • HOUSEHOLD BANKRUPTCIES ROC
    2,15 per 1 000 Quebec 3,17
    per 1 000 (47,4 )
  • COMMERCIAL BANKRUPTCIES Que/Can 37

14
FACT 10
  • AVERAGE WEEKLY EARNINGS Que/Can
  • 1980-89 98.0
  • in 1999 93.6

15
FACT 11 INTERNATIONAL EXPORTS of GDP
  • 1999 1981-83
  • Quebec 35.0 17.4
  • ROC 42.3 19.8

16
FACT 12 TECHNOLOGICAL EXPORTS
  • HT HTAHT
  • Que/Can 45-50 lt 15

17
EFFECTS
  • Relative deterioration of services health s.s.
  • Relative reduction of the quality of education
  • Relative decline of infrastructures
  • Relative deterioration of the environment
  • Relative decline of cultural industries
  • Relative decrease of the quality of recreational
    structures

18
UNDERLYING CAUSES
  • Generalized lack of performance and productivity
    incentives.
  • Aging of public institutions/mechanisms for the
    coordination and allocation of resources.
  • Inadequate performance of organizations and
    businesses in terms of
  • ensuring maximum use of resources
  • encouraging individuals to make a greater
    contribution to the betterment of society.

19
The prosperity of society depends on the quality
of its institutions/organizations
  • The prosperity of a society as well as its
    competitiveness and capacity to adapt to changes
    essentially depends
  • not only on the quality of its human resources
    (education) and natural resources,
  • but also on the quality of its institutions/organi
    zations.
  • The main roles of institutions and organizations
    are
  • to ensure cooperation and coordinate decisions
    taken by many different individual agents.
  • to encourage these economic agents to
  • fully contribute to the mission (values,
    objectives) of the organizations
  • use their resources and information (public and
    private) in the most socially efficient way.

20
A MODERN VIEW OF THE STATE?A COMPETITIVE SOCIAL
DEMOCRACY
21
A MODERN VIEW OF THE STATE
  • Benevolent, informed government
  • Benevolent government with decentralized
    information
  • Benevolent government with contractual
    limitations
  • Government with private agendas

22
SIGNIFICANTTRANSFORMATIONS
  • Accelerated development of communication and
    information technologies
  • Globalization of markets
  • Internationalization of cultures

23
COMPETITIVE SOCIAL DEMOCRACY (1)
  • Ultimate goal Well-being of individuals/citizens
  • Three main principles
  • 1. Individuals capacity to make rational
    choices
  • 2. Social partnership shapes the individual
  • 3. Efficient means of coordination and
  • incentive schemes optimal use of
  • resources

24
COMPETITIVE SOCIAL DEMOCRACY (2)
  • Two major challenges
  • Develop the capacity to experiment and use
    creativity in problem solving
  • Avoid the twofold trap
  • Generalized under-performance
  • Growth unable to get rid of a large enough number
    of obsolete technologies and organizations

25
  • The traditional social democracy is based on an
    old and outmoded philosophy, discourse and social
    model.
  • It is a social democracy oriented toward
  • means
  • the preservation of acquired rights
  • the protection of rents and interests of
    organized pressure groups
  • the safeguarding of sacred cows

26
  • The competitive social democracy is a new
  • social democracy
  • Modern
  • Innovative
  • Responsible
  • Based on a new social model derived from the
    socio-economic analysis of efficient
    organizations and institutions.

27
  • It is a social democracy that is definitely
  • Oriented toward ends and objectives.
  • Open to technological and organizational changes.
  • Conducive to the emergence of power, based on
    competence in all environments and all lines of
    activity.
  • How can this be achieved?

28
5 MAJOR REFORMS
  • 1. Promotion of well-defined key competencies in
    the public and private sectors.
  • 2. Promotion of competitive mechanisms.
  • 3. Promotion of human capital development
  • 4. Abandon paternalistic price controls and
    the maintenance of dependence.
  • 5. Evaluation of public programs and policies.

29
PROGRAM 1
  • Promote well-defined key skills in the public and
    private sector (1)
  • Role of the public sector
  • Identify needs for social goods and services in
    terms of both quality and quantity.
  • Make the required arbitrages.
  • Manage contracts and partnerships for the
    production and distribution of social goods and
    services.

30
PROGRAM 1
  • Promote well-defined key skills in the public and
    private sector (2)
  • Role of the private sector
  • Produce and adequately distribute private, social
    and public goods and services.
  • Use the best available human, material and
    technological resources.
  • Proportionate dismantling of the public sector.

31
PROGRAM 2
  • Promote competitive mechanisms.
  • Promote the creation, liberalization,
    dissemination and understanding of economic
    laws and mechanisms
  • Abstain from using price controls in order to
  • avoid waste
  • foster the emergence of innovative approaches to
    meet problems and challenges.

32
PROGRAM 3
  • Promote the development of human capital.
  • Encourage individuals to take charge of their
    skill base.
  • Involve private and public organizations in the
    development of skills at the college and
    university levels.
  • Make the financing of higher education more
    dependent on performance incentives.

33
PROGRAM 4
  • Abandon paternalistic price controls and the
    maintenance of dependence.
  • Reduce the implicit tax rates of the unemployed
    and social assistance recipients.
  • Reduce the implicit tax rates of top earners.
  • Introduce integrated mechanisms for direct
    incentive-based redistribution of income.

34
PROGRAM 5
  • Evaluation of public programs and policies by
    rigorous, transparent, independent and credible
    evaluation methods.
  • 3 examples
  • Job creation
  • RD support
  • Training programs for employment insurance and
    social assistance recipients.

35
FOR A NEW SOCIAL DEMOCRACY?FOR A NEW QUIET
REVOLUTIONThe time to act is now!
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