He charged all Officers and Men of the Service to ensure maximum collection of revenue and strict implementation of
the fiscal policy of Government.
He also hopes that bitcoin will replace national currencies, but it really depends on
the fiscal policies of governments.
Not exact matches
But one thing is certain: either Italy gets some form
of government and continues credible economic reforms and
fiscal consolidation, or the markets - with active help from Germany et al. - will force Rome in an IMF - EU - ECB ward where these
policies will be imposed.
«When you change your trading relationship and population movements with the world, it has to change everything from the cost and supply
of labour, the cost
of good (exchange rate), the availability
of market access (in and out),
government finances (
fiscal policy) or as we know very well monetary
policy.
«We have changed our view
of the difficulties in bridging the gulf between the political parties over
fiscal policy, which makes us pessimistic about the capacity
of Congress and the Administration to be able to leverage their agreement this week into a broader
fiscal consolidation plan that stabilizes the
government's debt dynamics any time soon.»
Part
of what has supported this recovery since the crisis has been
fiscal policy, so we have much higher
government debt than we had before, where is the room for
governments to do
fiscal expansion in a renewed downturn?
He's saying that the
governments are too hesitant to implement more
fiscal policy, but that these same
governments might give the Central Bankers
of the world a blank check?
Posted by Nick Falvo under aboriginal peoples, Alberta, cities, corporate income tax, demographics,
fiscal policy, homeless, housing, income tax, Indigenous people, municipalities, Ontario, poverty, public infrastructure, Role
of government, social
policy, taxation.
Posted by Nick Falvo under Alberta, cities, corporate income tax,
fiscal policy, homeless, housing, income tax, municipalities, NEO-LIBERAL
POLICIES, Ontario, poverty, Role
of government, social
policy, taxation.
Instead
of putting budget planning «on - hold», the
government should be taking stock
of future economic and
fiscal challenges and developing an appropriate
policy response.
Such approaches could be designed to be revenue - neutral over the business cycle; they also could avoid past debates over
fiscal stimulus by separating decisions on countercyclical
policy from longer - run decisions about the appropriate role
of the
government and tax system.
Posted by Nick Falvo under Alberta, cities,
fiscal federalism, homeless, housing, municipalities, poverty, public services, Role
of government, social
policy.
Posted by Nick Falvo under budgets, Canada, democracy, economic literacy, economic risk, federal budget,
fiscal policy, progressive economic strategies, public services, regulation, Regulations, Role
of government, social
policy.
Posted by Nick Falvo under Alberta, Canada, cities,
fiscal federalism,
fiscal policy, homeless, housing, municipalities, poverty, public infrastructure, public services, Role
of government, social
policy.
Posted by Nick Falvo under aboriginal peoples, Alberta, budgets, Child Care, cities, demographics, education, employment, environment,
fiscal federalism,
fiscal policy, gender critique, homeless, housing, HST, income, income distribution, income support, Indigenous people, inflation, minimum wage, municipalities, NDP, oil and gas, poverty, privatization, progressive economic strategies, Role
of government, social
policy, taxation, wages, women.
Posted by Nick Falvo under aboriginal peoples, Balanced budgets, child benefits, Child Care, corporate income tax, CPP, debt, deficits, early learning, economic thought, federal budget,
fiscal federalism,
fiscal policy, homeless, housing, income distribution, income support, income tax, Indigenous people, inequality, labour market, macroeconomics, OECD, Old Age Security, poverty, privatization, public infrastructure, public services, Role
of government, social
policy, taxation, women.
Posted by Nick Falvo under aboriginal peoples, Canada, Canada's North, cities, economic history,
fiscal federalism, homeless, housing, Indigenous people, municipalities, NEO-LIBERAL
POLICIES, poverty, public infrastructure, public services, Role
of government, social
policy.
Posted by Nick Falvo under Bank
of Canada, budgets, China, Conservative
government, deficits, economic crisis, economic growth, employment, exchange rates, federal budget,
fiscal policy, global crisis, household debt, IMF, interest rates, labour market, macroeconomics, manufacturing, monetary
policy, recession, stimulus, unemployment.
C.D. Howe Institute «s `'» Canada «s 2012
Fiscal Accountability Rankings `'» looks at the financial information provided by senior levels
of government (federal
government, provincial
governments and the territories) according to «Fiscal Accountability «and `'» Scoring Governments «Over - and Undershoots `'» and makes a number of policy recom
governments and the territories) according to «
Fiscal Accountability «and `'» Scoring
Governments «Over - and Undershoots `'» and makes a number of policy recom
Governments «Over - and Undershoots `'» and makes a number
of policy recommendations.
There is no narrative that sets out the longer - run economic and social challenges, and there is no discussion
of how these challenges are interrelated Eliminating the deficit has been the cornerstone
of the
government's
fiscal policy since 2010.
The joint announcement
of the inflation target between the
Government and the central bank helps demonstrate that there is unlikely to be any inconsistency between the setting
of monetary and
fiscal policy.
Eliminating the deficit has been the cornerstone
of the
government's
fiscal policy for some time.
The first is a
fiscal policy that acknowledges the role
of the
government social safety net in buffering the effects
of creative destruction, seeks to provide those services in an efficient, market - oriented fashion, and pays for those services with a simple and transparent tax system.
Posted by Nick Falvo under aboriginal peoples, Alberta, Conservative
government, federal budget,
fiscal federalism, homeless, housing, Indigenous people, poverty, Role
of government, social
policy.
Popular support abroad is developing to back
governments creating a set
of rules able to prevent U.S. exporters from benefiting from a currency instability caused by America's own
fiscal, financial and military
policies.
Posted by Nick Falvo under Bank
of Canada, banks, budgets, Conservative
government, consumers, deficits, economic growth, economic models, economic thought, employment, Europe, exchange rates, federal budget,
fiscal policy, household debt, housing, inflation, interest rates, monetary
policy, oil and gas, prices, Role
of government, social indicators, tar sands, US.
Posted by Arun DuBois under banks, budgets, deflation, economic crisis, economic growth, economic literacy, federal budget,
fiscal policy, global crisis, monetary
policy, recession, Role
of government.
The report provides «a projection
of current
fiscal policy 75 years into the future to assess the implications
of demographic and structural pressures on
government financing».
For state and local
governments, the statutory requirements for balanced budgets meant that
fiscal policies turned restrictive relatively quickly once budget surpluses and rainy day funds were exhausted, and this was only temporarily mitigated by federal transfers to the states as part
of the initial
fiscal stimulus program.
But one empirical observation: in the mid 1990's the Canadian
government tightened
fiscal policy a lot (for reasons unrelated to reducing aggregate demand), but the Bank
of Canada managed to offset that
fiscal tightening and keep inflation on target.
That prevented the
government from administering needed
fiscal stimulus and shifted the burden onto the shoulders
of ECB's monetary
policy.
On a more positive note politically, however, in recent months there has been a rising expectation that
governments will increasingly start to focus more intently on
fiscal stimulus, and we expect this theme to gain some traction in a number
of major economies given the diminishing returns
of unconventional monetary
policy.
Mr. Schäuble, a member
of Ms. Merkel's conservative Christian Democratic Union, told The Wall Street Journal last week that «as soon as we have a joint EU
fiscal policy, we can consider joint liability» for
governments» borrowing.
At that time, economists feared a major recession, which historically had followed major wars, and the Federal
government intended to be ready for resumption
of the New Deal's
fiscal policy of massive, albeit feckless, spending to create full employment.
Previously he was the Deputy Minister
of Finance in Yukon, Assistant Deputy Minister
of Budgeting, Economics and
Fiscal Policy with the
Government of Alberta, and Special Economic and
Fiscal Advisor to the Deputy Minister
of Finance for the
Government of the North West Territories.
Option (e) remains extremely risky given the massive levels
of outstanding
government debt (and potential for
fiscal crisis) and therefore low in probability in our view, but the idea came to the fore in investor consciousness after the BOJ held meetings with former FOMC Chairman Bernanke, credited for applying the idea
of «helicopter money» to deflation - fighting in central bank
policy.
Meanwhile, the
government is also attempting to boost sentiment via the «second arrow»
of Abenomics,
fiscal policy.
The transition from monetary
policy to
fiscal policy has begun in the U.S., and the baton has now been passed to the executive and legislative branches
of government, which are responsible for enacting
policies that can carry growth further.
Posted by Armine Yalnizyan under capitalism, democracy, economic growth, financial transactions tax,
fiscal policy, global crisis, inequality, Occupy Movement, Role
of government, taxation.
There is nothing «fair» or «compassionate» about this
government's ideological
policies that have created a
fiscal train wreck the likes
of which our province has never seen.
According to the Parliamentary Budget Officer (PBO),
fiscal sustainability means that, under current
policies,
government debt should not grow continuously as a share
of GDP.
Posted by Nick Falvo under aboriginal peoples, Alberta, Employment Insurance,
fiscal federalism, gender critique, guaranteed annual income, income, income support, Indigenous people, inequality, labour market, Old Age Security, Ontario, poverty, progressive economic strategies, Role
of government, social
policy, unemployment.
This will also present a major communication challenge for the
government Lastly, in preparing the 2017 budget proposed new
policy actions should be carefully reviewed in terms
of their absolute need, their priority and their impact on
fiscal sustainability.
These factors — many
of which are beyond our control and the effects
of which can be difficult to predict — include: credit, market, liquidity and funding, insurance, operational, regulatory compliance, strategic, reputation, legal and regulatory environment, competitive and systemic risks and other risks discussed in the risk sections
of our 2017 Annual Report; including global uncertainty and volatility, elevated Canadian housing prices and household indebtedness, information technology and cyber risk, regulatory change, technological innovation and new entrants, global environmental
policy and climate change, changes in consumer behavior, the end
of quantitative easing, the business and economic conditions in the geographic regions in which we operate, the effects
of changes in
government fiscal, monetary and other
policies, tax risk and transparency and environmental and social risk.
From 1990 to 2005, he was Director
Fiscal Policy Division Department of Finance, responsible for overall preparation of the federal budget; preparation and assessment of medium - and long - term projections of federal revenues and expenses and implications for fiscal policy; analysis of fiscal conditions at both the federal and provincial levels; evaluation of various budget proposals; preparation of monthly Fiscal Monitor; with the Office of the Comptroller General (OCG), assessing and evaluating accounting standards proposed by the Public Sector Accounting Board (PSAB) of the CICA and recommending changes in government accounting policies; with the OCG, responsible for implementation of accrual accounting for the federal budget and the government's financial state
Fiscal Policy Division Department of Finance, responsible for overall preparation of the federal budget; preparation and assessment of medium - and long - term projections of federal revenues and expenses and implications for fiscal policy; analysis of fiscal conditions at both the federal and provincial levels; evaluation of various budget proposals; preparation of monthly Fiscal Monitor; with the Office of the Comptroller General (OCG), assessing and evaluating accounting standards proposed by the Public Sector Accounting Board (PSAB) of the CICA and recommending changes in government accounting policies; with the OCG, responsible for implementation of accrual accounting for the federal budget and the government's financial state
Policy Division Department
of Finance, responsible for overall preparation
of the federal budget; preparation and assessment
of medium - and long - term projections
of federal revenues and expenses and implications for
fiscal policy; analysis of fiscal conditions at both the federal and provincial levels; evaluation of various budget proposals; preparation of monthly Fiscal Monitor; with the Office of the Comptroller General (OCG), assessing and evaluating accounting standards proposed by the Public Sector Accounting Board (PSAB) of the CICA and recommending changes in government accounting policies; with the OCG, responsible for implementation of accrual accounting for the federal budget and the government's financial state
fiscal policy; analysis of fiscal conditions at both the federal and provincial levels; evaluation of various budget proposals; preparation of monthly Fiscal Monitor; with the Office of the Comptroller General (OCG), assessing and evaluating accounting standards proposed by the Public Sector Accounting Board (PSAB) of the CICA and recommending changes in government accounting policies; with the OCG, responsible for implementation of accrual accounting for the federal budget and the government's financial state
policy; analysis
of fiscal conditions at both the federal and provincial levels; evaluation of various budget proposals; preparation of monthly Fiscal Monitor; with the Office of the Comptroller General (OCG), assessing and evaluating accounting standards proposed by the Public Sector Accounting Board (PSAB) of the CICA and recommending changes in government accounting policies; with the OCG, responsible for implementation of accrual accounting for the federal budget and the government's financial state
fiscal conditions at both the federal and provincial levels; evaluation
of various budget proposals; preparation
of monthly
Fiscal Monitor; with the Office of the Comptroller General (OCG), assessing and evaluating accounting standards proposed by the Public Sector Accounting Board (PSAB) of the CICA and recommending changes in government accounting policies; with the OCG, responsible for implementation of accrual accounting for the federal budget and the government's financial state
Fiscal Monitor; with the Office
of the Comptroller General (OCG), assessing and evaluating accounting standards proposed by the Public Sector Accounting Board (PSAB)
of the CICA and recommending changes in
government accounting
policies; with the OCG, responsible for implementation
of accrual accounting for the federal budget and the
government's financial statements.
Posted by Nick Falvo under BC, competition, Conservative
government, corporate income tax, debt, demographics, education,
fiscal federalism,
fiscal policy, household debt, income distribution, income tax, inequality, macroeconomics, Newfoundland and Labrador, P3s, part time work, post-secondary education, privatization, productivity, public infrastructure, Quebec, rankings, regulation, Role
of government, social
policy, student debt, student movement, taxation, user fees, working time, young workers.
Over the past decade, Canada's strong economy, its
fiscal policies, its
governments and its regulators have fostered the growth
of a world class financial services industry.
Today Jamaica has a conservative
government developing a
fiscal policy corresponding to the demands
of the IMF.
We are now saddled with a rigged economy based on record - setting trade and
fiscal deficits, the most secretive and intrusive
government in our country's memory, and the pursuit
of «preventive» war as a basis for foreign
policy.
If, for instance, lower growth was the result
of the
Government's
fiscal policy, they would say so.