OECD Study of Mobile Phone Costs

12 08 2009

The OECD has released a study showing the costs of mobile phones in Canada is high relative to most other developed countries. (This study confirms what I knew already from my own experience– we pay a lot of in Canada for each minute of airtime and each text, certainly more than in the UK).

The really interesting thing is the discussion the release of this report has generated in the media, international and Canadian. For Canadian reactions to the OECD report, see here, here, here, and here.  For the BBC’s coverage of this report, see here. For the Wall Street Journal‘s take, see here. For other international reactions to this report, see here, here, and here.





Speculation about Merger of BCE and Telus

12 08 2009

An article in today’s Report on Business deals with the speculation that BCE (the parent of Bell Canada, the old telephony monopoly in Ontario and Quebec) may merge with Telus (the reincarnated version of AGT, the formerly government-owned telephony monopoly in Alberta). The merged company might prove to be a national champion for Canada in the business of telecommunications.

Of course, such a merger would need the approval of the CRTC, which may be reluctant to make Canada’s mobile phone market even less competitive than it is now. (See this recent story about the high costs of mobile phones in Canada).





Review of Beattie’s Global Economic History

24 07 2009

Economist magazine’s review of Alan Beattie’s False Economy: A Surprising Economic History of the World Riverhead Books; 336 pages; $26.95. Penguin; £20.

The review is positive. Beattie is a journalist who works at the Financial Times.





Jim Balsillie, Canadian Economic Nationalist

21 07 2009

Jim Balsillie, the co-CEO of RIM, the maker of the Blackberry, is upset that the wireless assets of Nortel Networks may end up in non-Canadian hands. (RIM hopes to acquire this part of the defunct Nortel empire for itself).

A RIM statesman said that the company believes that the loss of Canadian ownership of Nortel’s wireless businesses “may significantly, adversely affect national interests, with potential national security implications, and that the Government of Canada should review the situation closely.”

I’m pointing out this news story to remind everybody that Canadian economic nationalism, the venerable tradition that gave us the National Policy, FIRA, and much else, is not dead. Neither has economic nationalism become the exclusive concern of ivory tower intellectuals and left-wing journalists. Balsillie is an eminently successful businessman, but he has also shown some impressive nationalist credentials.

Update:

The last 24 hours have seen a flurry of news items related to Jim Balsillie’s efforts to acquire the wireless assets of Nortel. See here, here, here, here, and here. For a aarticularly good article about this in the Toronto Star, see here. An editorial in today’s Globe and Mail expresses cynicism about Mr Balsillie’s Canadian nationalism, calling his nationalist arguments “dubious” and dismissing them as empty rhetoric designed to cover his true interests. I’m not convinced that this is an accurate reading of the situation or that it is right to reduce all business behaviour in terms of a pure form of the rational actor/homo economicus model. Business people are, obviously, out to make money, but I do think that economic nationalism, a desire to benefit the collectivity, is also a force that influences how businesspersons operate.

Today’s Globe also contains an excellent column by Jeffrey Simpson in which he asks why the federal government had plenty of money to prop up the Canadian operations of two American corporations (GM and Chrysler), but was unwilling to help out Nortel, a genuinely Canadian company.

Second Update:

My understanding is that RIM’s interest in Nortel’s wireless assets relates to some patents held by Nortel. See here, here, and here. The patents are very attractive to RIM because they are for new technologies that allow more data to be sent faster over increasingly crowded networks. The patents are especially valuable since demand for wireless bandwidth is predicted to increase dramatically as people do more complex things, such as watch YouTube videos, with their mobile phones. To get a sense of the possible consequences of not addressing the issue of cell network congestion, consider that during Obama’s inauguration ceremony, most of the cell networks in Washington were overloaded because so many people in the crowd were simultaneously sending digital photos to their friends back home. Whichever mobile phone maker can solve this issue first will be able to deliver vaster content to customers and thus gain a real advantage.

Interestingly, Japan’s cell phone network deals with this issue much better than the networks of either European countries or North America. There is a consensus among experts and ordinary visitors to Japan (including myself), that Japanese mobile phones are more advanced than the ones used in other countries. (I can speak with some authority on this issue, as I live in a household that uses three different mobile phone standards, Japanese, UK, and Canadian).  A recent issue of the New York Times had a fascinating article examining why Japan’s superior mobile phone technology has not been adopted in other countries. If the Japanese can get other countries to adopt their standards, then Nortel’s patents may or may not be worth less than RIM and the other people bidding for them now think.





Does Stephen Harper Have Lunatic Ideas About Taxation?

14 07 2009

Today’s Globe and Mail has a piece by Jeffrey Simpson analyzing some particularly idiotic comments uttered by Stephen Harper during a recent interview with the paper’s editorial board.

Mr Harper said: “You know, there’s two schools in economics on this. One is that there are some good taxes and the other is that no taxes are good taxes. I’m in the latter category. I don’t believe that any taxes are good taxes.”

Simpson correctly points out just how ludicrous this statement is. Mr Harper appears to be arguing against taxation, a position that leads one to believe that he is in favour of the effective abolition of the state. It is one thing to say “Canada’s current rate of taxation is higher than would be optimal” or “we should change the relative mix of taxes” or “this particular tax is the least bad tax” . It is quite another to come out against taxation, especially when one is the leader of a government that has, to date, engaged in only minor tinkering with the tax system, not to mention far more spending that the predecessor Liberal government.

Harper’s comment suggests that he secretly shares the beliefs of anarcho-capitalists and the other extreme libertarians who envision a society without any taxation. (As a very young man, I briefly flirted with such ideas, only to realize that they were wildly impractical). I wonder how Mr Harper would reconcile the position quoted above with, say, his frequently reiterated support for socialized medicine, an institution most Canadians regard as a defining national institution. A few other thoughts.

1) There is a problem with beginning sentences with “you know”. It is poor English. If the listener already knows a fact, why restate it?

2) Mr Harper prefaced his next comments with the words “there’s two schools in economics on this”. (I presume he meant “there are”). I’m struck that Harper adopted the pose of a teacher, explaining economics to the Globe and Mail’s editorial board. Mr Harper is not an economist. He took an undergraduate degree in economics and then wrote an MA thesis in political economy. He does not have a PhD and has never worked as an economist. In fact, I suspect that some members of the Globe’s editorial board have at least as much formal training in economics as Mr Harper. Some may even have actual graduate degrees in the discipline. The quasi-professorial presumption revealed by Mr Harper in this statement is amusing. Mr Harper’s comments suggest that a little bit of knowledge is a dangerous thing. I am not an economist, but I am an economic historian who reads journals in which economists publish and who thus is tolerably familiar with the discipline of economics. I therefore feel somewhat qualified to report that there are many schools of thought in the economics profession about the best way of raising public revenue, not just two. Moreover, Harper’s apparent view, that all taxes are bad (and therefore should be abolished) is a position shared by few, if any, economists, certainly not by tenured economists at mainstream institutions. One possible exception to this statement is Murray Rothbard, an economist who adopted the extreme liberation view that all taxes were bad. Rothbard, however, was a marginal figure in academe and new held a tenure track position. Moreover, most economists disagree with the taxation policies of the Harper government, especially its decision to prioritize cuts to the GST, a consumption tax.

3) If they truly represent Mr Harper’s views, the man is well outside the mainstream of Canadian, or indeed, Western politics. Indeed, they are with few precedents in twentieth century Canadian politics. In the 1860s, a few of the more extreme Anti-Confederates adopted the position that “all taxes were bad” (see my article on the subject in the Canadian Historical Review), but one would hope that a serving Canadian Prime Minister would not want to identify themselves with the people who opposed Canada’s creation.

It may be that Mr Harper was misquoted. As someone who voted Conservative in 2006, I sincerely hope that this is the case. Mr Harper normally adopts a tone of moderation and reasonableness. In an attempt to win over centre-right Liberal voters, Harper has tried to associate his policies with the fiscal tradition of Paul Martin. But the statements reported in today’s blog post identify Mr Harper more with the lunatic fringe of right wing politics in the United States than with any identifiable Canadian political tradition.

If the quote is accurate, the best that could be said about Harper is that he was inarticulate, not an extremist.  We need to ask, however, whether we want an inarticulate person in charge of the nation’s finances?





Interesting Conversation on Bloggingheads

10 07 2009

I would like to point out an interesting discussion that recently took place on Bloggingheads. Judah Grunstein and Will Ferroggiaro, two international relations experts, discussed the ways in which history has influenced the ways in which various western countries make foreign policy.

See here.





The Great Canadian Historical Ignorance Debate

6 07 2009

Here are yet more newspaper stories prompted by the Dominion Institute’s poll on historical ignorance in Canada. See here, here, and here.





Jacques Lacoursière

6 07 2009

Today’s Montreal Gazette has a story about Jacques Lacoursière. Lacoursière is to Quebec what Pierre Berton is to English-speaking Canada.





FT Article on Slavery and the City of London

30 06 2009

The front page of this weekend’s edition of the Financial Times carried a story about historical research that has uncovered new evidence regarding the details City of London’s involvement in slavery. [Note: story includes video of interview with noted historian Catherine Hall] The most interesting fact revealed in the article is that Nathan Mayer Rothschild accepted slaves as collateral for a loan. The House of Rothschild had previously been famous for arranging the loan that allowed the British government to borrow the money needed to compensate slaveholders when slavery was abolished in the British Empire in the 1830s.

I’m glad that the FT ran this story, because it gives readers a sense of the historical importance of corporate archives (although in this case the key documents were uncovered at the National Archives in Kew). However, I’m not certain why information about the Rothschilds’ indirect involvement in slavery is terribly newsworthy.  After all, the House of Rothschild were the bankers of the Empire of Brazil at a time when that country had slavery. Like many other firms in Britain, America, and elsewhere, many City firms were indirect beneficiaries of slavery. We knew this already.





More Dominion Institute Nonsense

29 06 2009

You know that Dominion Day Canada Day is rapidly approaching because the Dominion Institute has released the results of a survey demonstrating that the average Canadian knows very little about Canadian history. See Canadian Press story here.  More press coverage, see here, here, and here. Publishing the results of this survey is an annual ritual for the Institute.

As I have said before, the annual surveys of the Dominion Institute are deeply flawed and display a terrible parochial mindset on the part of their creators. First, the DI survey only test knowledge of Canadian history, the apparent assumption being that it doesn’t matter whether our citizens know about Auschwitz or Pericles, as long as they know about Riel and Diefenbaker.
Moreover, the DI makes no effort to compare the results of its surveys with similar historical knowledge surveys in other countries. (In contrast, science and math surveys of high school students are almost always subject to cross national comparisons and the creation of league tables).

The DI has never presented a shred of evidence to support its claim that Canadians know less about Canadian history than Americans know about US history.  The Globe article on the DI survey paraphrases the argument of Marc Chalifoux, executive director of the Dominion Institute, thus:
“Americans are full of national pride, while Canadians don’t toot their historical horn to the same extent.”

Chalifoux’s notion that there is inverse relationship between national pride and historical ignorance is a very dubious one at best.  In fact, it is risible. A _rigorous_ historical education is actually a fairly effective antidote to nationalism. (When I say rigorous historical education, I’m talking about the type of education that is based on secondary sources that have gone through peer-review). Nationalists, especially ethnic nationalists, trade on the public’s limited knowledge of history.  Some of the most appallingly nationalist dictatorships in history have emerged in societies with very low levels of general and historical knowledge (think Burma).  I think we would all agree that there is more nationalism in the Balkans than in north-western Europe, but it is north-western Europe that you find more educated people. (Being able to recite an epic poem about the Battle of Kosovo doesn’t make you educated in the same way that, say completing a British A-level in history). Modern Germans are very anti-nationalism and almost proud of being unpatriotic. The average German today is probably knows much more history than the average German in say, 1932, because they have spent much longer in school, has more leisure time to read history, and can buy more historical books with an hour’s wages.

Moreover, I’m not certain what the hell “toot their historical horn” means.  The Globe appears to be suggesting that a form of historical education that stresses the nation’s positive accomplishments would be a good thing because it would promote patriotism and loyalty to Canada.  I’m not convinced that such a historical curriculum would achieve these desiderata. Americans are very proud of their country’s recent accomplishments (such as inventing the Internet) but are very aware of all of the bad things that have taken place in American history. For instance, we heard a lot about slavery during the televised coverage of Obama’s inauguration.  Knowing that Thomas Jefferson slept with his slaves doesn’t keep Americans from being patriotic and loyal to the United States circa 2009: people are intelligent enough to know that a nation should be judged by what it is doing today, not by what its members did a long time ago.