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1 3. Closing the 49th Parallel: An Unexplored Episode in the Political and Economic History of the Canadian Welfare State This lecture makes use of: James Davies and Stanley L. Winer. "Closing the 49th Parallel: An Unexplored Episode in Canadian Economic and Political History". Canadian Public Policy, forthcoming Stanley Winer Canada Research Chair Professor Carleton University 2 The near closing of the Canada-U.S. border to emigration in the late 1960’s: • U.S. Immigration Act of 1965: A radical change in immigration regulations affecting Canada, coming into force in 1968. • Near closure lasted until the onset of the mobility provisions of the free trade agreements in the early 1990’s. • Historically, this is a very unusual episode in relations between Canada and the United States, one whose implications for Canadian public policy have received little attention. 3 Figure A1 Permanent Emigration to the U.S. as a Percent of Population Canada, 1870 - 2000 3.0 2.5 2.0 1.5 1.0 0.5 0.0 1875 1900 1925 1950 1975 2000 4 Official Migrants from Canada to the United States, 1946 - 2005 Restriction effective 1968 FTA / NFTA 5 Implications ? (a) for labour markets and inequality (b) for the fiscal system 6 Why is this investigation controversial? 7 a. Implications for Canadian Labour Markets (i) implications for labour market integration! Table 1 Correlations of Mean Weekly Wages and Salaries Canada and the United States, 1921 – 2008 Period 1950-1968 1969-1990 1969-2008 Correlation of Mean Wage Levels 0.993 0.190 -0.235 Correlation of Percent Changes in Mean Wages 0.635 0.426 0.338 8 (ii) implications for inequality in Canada Gini Coefficients for Family Income, Canada and the U.S. Five Year Averages, 1970 – 2005 Years Canada: Market Income Canada: Total Income U.S.: Total Income 1965-1969 na .328 .352 1971-1975 .378 .330 .356 1976-1980 .378 .326 .363 1981-1985 .396 .329 .381 1986-1990 .402 .331 .395 1991-1995 .422 .336 .415 1996-2000 .430 .352 .429 2001-2005 .417 .347 .437 Notes:For Canada 1965-1969 includes the years 1965, 1967 and 1969. Those are the only years available from 1965 to 1970. For the U.S. 1965-1969 includes each year from 1965 to 1969. Statistics Canada (2005) reports a historical revision for the period from 1990 forwards that increased estimated Gini coefficients.The above table uses the Gini coefficients published by Statistics Canada for 1965–2002 before the 2005 revision. For 2003-2005 this table uses the Gini coefficients published in Statistics Canada on the revised basis (2007), but reduces each one by the difference between 2002 Gini coefficients reported on the old and new bases. Sources:For Canada, 1965-1969 Love and Wolfson (1976. Table 5); 1971-2000 Kesselman and Cheung (2006, Table 12.4); 2001-2005 Statistics Canada (2007). For the U.S.: U.S. Census Bureau, Income website, http://www.webcitation.org/query?url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.census.gov%2Fhhes%2Fwww%2Fincome%2Fhistinc%2Ff01AR.html&date=2009-04-12 9 (iii) implications for the elasticity of labour supply OLS Regressions of Annual Changes in the Log of Civilian Labour Force on Changes in the Log of Wages, Canada, 1946 – 1995 (Absolute value of t- statistics) Variable Constant D (Log of Canadian Wages) D( Log of U.S. Wages) R2 1946-1968 0.0208* (4.84) 0.4324* (3.49) -0.3988* (3.46) 0.539 1969-1990 0.0239* (10.39) 0.1640*** (1.77) -0.0338 (0.30) 0.151 *(**)*** = Significant at 1% (5%) 10%. 1969-1995 0.0201* (7.73) 0.1971*** (1.76) -0.0287 (0.20) 0.126 10 How important is Canada-U.S. migration in overall Canadian labour supply? • Assume immigration to Canada from non-U.S. sources, F , is exogenous, and neglect Canadians emigrating to countries other than the U.S. • Aggregate labour supply elasticity, e, is then a weighted sum of the domestic labor supply elasticity, eD, the wage elasticity of immigration from the U.S., eI , and the (negative of the) wage elasticity of emigration, eE e = wDeD + wIeI - wEeE where the weights wD, wI , wE are shares of end-of-period labour supply, D + F + I – E. • During1960-68 there were an average of 44,869 official migrants from Canada to the U.S., = 0.64 % of the average labour force for this period => wD = 0.0064. In the same period immigration from the U.S. averaged 14,536 => wI = .002. • Using these weights, and with eI = 5.7 and eE = 9.0 from Hunt and Mueller (2010), we have that migration components accounted for 0.069, or 16 percent of the 0.43 wage elasticity of aggregate labour supply in Canada before the border was closed. 11 (iv) quantitative importance of cross-border migration for Canadian policy? • Were cross-border flows large enough to matter for policy choices in Canada? • Caution: Small flows before 1965 don't necessarily reflect what could happen after new, 'big' Canadian policy changes (e.g., socialized medicine). • Develop sense of the constraints on Canadian policy choices imposed by the threat of emigration in the following manner: 12 First, note that the gap between Canadian and U.S. total govt. expenditure to gdp ratios widened to 10% by early 1990's: Comprehensive Measure of Government Size: 1929 - 2004 Defense and Depreciation Adjusted with Nonprofit Hospitals and Universities Included Consistently 0.55 0.50 Proportion of GDP 0.45 0.40 38.5% 0.35 37.0% 0.30 0.25 0.20 0.15 0.10 0.10 0.05 0.00 1929 1932 1935 1938 1941 1944 1947 1950 1953 1956 1959 1962 1965 1968 1971 1974 1977 1980 1983 1986 1989 1992 1995 1998 2001 2004 Canada United States Source: Ferris and Winer (2007, Figure 8 ) Canada / U.S. (Equality = .10) 13 Then we need to make some detailed (back of the envelope) calculations: • Suppose the burden of financing govt. expansion falls entirely on labour, through income taxes, payroll taxes, or other taxes shifted onto labour => a rise in the effective tax rate on labour = about 15 percent, since labour income = 2/3 of GDP. • Starting from yearly movements between Canada and the U.S. at their 1960-68 level, and using elasticities from Hunt and Mueller (2010), this => an annual reduction of about 13,000 in the number of people immigrating from the U.S. and a rise in emigration by about 68,000 for net emigration of 81,000 people per year, or 1.1 % of the labour force. • Over the typical four-year life of a government, this would add up to 4.4 % of the labour force. • A counterfactual: from 1968 to 1990 the female LFP rate in Canada rose from 37.4% to 58.5%, for an average annual increase of 1.0 percentage points. In 1968 such an increase represented 71,000 women whereas by 1990 it meant 108,000. These numbers are of a similar magnitude. 14 b. Implications for the Canadian Fiscal System (i) tax structure (ii) overall size of government 15 Equilibria in a Competitive Political System Before and After the Closing of the Border M arg in al P ol iti cal C os ts and Benef its P er D ol la r T ax B ase A: E m pl oy m ent In com e T ot al m arg in al p ol it ical co st s p er $ T ot al m argi nal p ol it ical b enefi ts p er $ T ax B ase B: Capi tal In com e M ar gi nal p ol it ica l co s ts pe r $ M argi n al p o li ti cal cos ts p er $ 1 2 0 2 2 Ra tA 1 1 Rb tB L affer cu rves n et of adm i n cos t s Ta x R a tes L affer cu rve net o f ad m in co st s R1 R2 Ra + Rb 16 Table 1: The Tax Mix in Canada, Consolidated Public Sector, 1950 – 2000 As A Percent of Total Taxes Personal Income Tax Year 1950 1960 15.0 21.1 Corporate Income Tax 24.3 17.0 Social Insurance Taxes na na Indirect Taxes Local Taxes 48.4 44.9 12.37 17.02 1970 34.2 11.6 7.1 33.1 14.06 1980 35.3 13.3 9.3 30.3 11.83 1985 1990 1995 2000 35.5 40.3 37.3 37.4 10.4 7.1 7.8 12.5 11.8 12.1 14.2 12.9 31.6 30.0 30.3 28.5 10.69 10.42 10.45 8.57 As A Percent of GDP Year Personal Income Tax Corporate Income Tax Social Insurance Taxes Indirect Taxes Local Taxes Total Taxes 1950 1960 3.2 5.1 5.2 4.0 na na 10.3 10.6 2.60 4.00 21.4 23.7 1970 10.0 3.4 2.1 9.7 4.10 29.3 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 10.2 10.9 14.1 13.1 13.4 3.9 3.2 2.4 2.7 4.5 2.7 3.7 4.3 5.0 4.6 8.7 9.7 10.6 10.6 10.2 3.40 3.30 3.70 3.70 3.10 28.9 30.8 35.1 35.1 35.7 17 Marginal Income Tax Rates, Canada, 1947 – 2000* * MTR = Marginal effective tax rate. P99 refers to the 99th percentile tax bracket. 18 (ii) Overall size of government? 19 Comprehensive Measure of Government Size: 1929 - 2004 Defense and Depreciation Adjusted with Nonprofit Hospitals and Universities Included Consistently 0.55 0.50 Proportion of GDP 0.45 0.40 38.5% 0.35 37.0% 0.30 0.25 0.20 0.15 0.10 0.10 0.05 0.00 1929 1932 1935 1938 1941 1944 1947 1950 1953 1956 1959 1962 1965 1968 1971 1974 1977 1980 1983 1986 1989 1992 1995 1998 2001 2004 Canada United States Source: Ferris and Winer (2007, Figure 8 ) Canada / U.S. (Equality = .10) 20 A broader view? Many factors affect government size and structure 21 Comprehensively Defined Non-Defense Government Spending as a Proportion of GDP 1929 - 2004 Source: Ferris and Winer (2007, Table 10b) Table A1: A Preliminary Model of Federal Government Non-interest Expenditure Relative to GNP (FEDERAL SIZE), 1900 – 2000 OLS estimation (Absolute value of Newey-West HAC standard errors, unless otherwise stated) Explanatory Variables (in log form, except for: WWI, WWII, WWII – AFTERMATH, FIXED EXCHANGE) REAL INCOME AGRICULTURE %YOUNG OPENNESS FIXED EXCHANGE WWI WWII WWII-AFTERMATH IMMIGRATION EMIGRATION_US 1900 – 2000 1921 – 2000 1921 – 2000 Saikkonen t’s(a) for col (2) (3) 1945 – 2000 (2) 1921 – 2000 Using emigration regimes indicators (2a) (1) 0.37 (0.70) 0.09 (0.03) -0.12 (0.31) -0.614* (2.77) -0.18* (4.05) 0.75* (5.15) 1.52* (5.52) 0.70* (4.43) -0.12* (3.80) -0.02 (0.63) 1945 – 2000 Saikkonen t’s (a) for col (4) (4) 1945 – 2000 Using emigration regimes indicators (4a) 0.35 (0.71) 0.14 (0.51) 0.73 (0.23) -0.69* (4.42) -0.15* (5.45) 0.14 (0.32) 0.02 (0.23) -0.28 (-0.90) -0.66* (3.46) -0.14* (3.56) 0.96** (2.50) 0.16 (0.75) 1.94* (5.03) -0.36*** (1.97) -0.06*** (1.97) 0.40 (0.66) 0.13 (0.44) -0.27 (0.95) -0.91* (4.93) -0.13* (4.76) -.02 (0.04) -.04 (0.16) -0.45 (1.47) -0.77* (-4.96) -0.14* (5.11) 3.54* (4.31) 1.71* (4.20) 0.50** (2.03) -1.54* (11.87) -0.07* (5.45) 1.49* (5.75) 0.69* (5.42) -0.06** (2.11) -0.18* (5.22) 1.52* (5.43) 0.86* (6.53) -0.20* (5.70) 1.14* (9.66) 0.06 (0.45) 0.03 (0.61) -0.41* (6.54) 1.33* (13.09) 0.18* (3.26) -0.01 (0.22) -0.13* (3.29) 1.35* (13.57) 0.10*** (1.74) -0.16 (0.33) 1.85* (18.8) 0.71* (8.43) -0. 02 (0.98) -0.32* (7.81) (5) 22 1945 – 2000 Emigration regimes Saikkonen t’s (a) for col (4a) (6) -0.25 (0.74) -0.09 (0.56) -0.72 -1.02* (12.25) -0.16* (21.56) 1.41* (19.42) 0.33* (5.64) -0.05** (2.35) -6.41 (1.274) -6.94 (1.46) 0.09 (1.18) 0.07 (0.55) -4.54 (1.05) Observations Adj. R2 Durbin Watson 101 0.93 1.01 80 0.95 1.45 80 0.92 1.27 78 0.97 1.49 56 0.86 1.27 56 0.86 1.17 54 0.95 2.27 LM serial correlation (Obsvs * R2): P-value 0.00 0.01 0.00 0.002 0.01 0.00 0.02 Adj. Dickey Fuller -6.10* -5.05** -6.39* -5.74* -4.51*** -5.51 -9.97 Phillips-Perron Saikkonen (1991) adjustment -5.72* -6.99* -5.80* -4.46*** -4.29 -24.89 3.50 -26.85 3.50 EMIGRATION_1968_1990 EMIGRATION_FTA Constant -18.13* (5.05) -5.43 (0.97) 0.16** (2.17) 0.12 (0.90) -0.96 (0.19) -35.09 (4.56) 0.06* (3.68) 0.16* (5.08) 1.44 (0.46) 54 0.95 2.61 Statistics 1.42 23 Predicted Federal Government Size With and Without Emigration Restrictions, 1968 – 1990. .20 .19 .18 .17 .16 .15 .14 .13 .12 .11 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000 Predicted federal government size without emigration restriction 1968 - 1990 Predicted federal government size in presence of actual emigration restrictions • Using the elasticity form of the effect of emigration in column (4), of - 0.13, the 80% fall in emigration (relative to population) that occurred between 1965 and 1975 has effect of increasing federal government size relative to GNP by about 10%. 24 Conclusions • Amazing uncoupling of Canadian and U.S. labour markets! • Consequences for inequality of incomes and the fiscal system are apparent • Role in overall development of the Canadian welfare state ??? • Further study of the role of international migration in Canadian public policy is warranted.