Watchdog : ACOA went on pre-vote spending spree
Media was quick to respond to the release of AIMS second publication of ACOA Watch: Locking Up the Pork Barrel. In two articles, one from the Ottawa Bureau of the Halifax Chronicle Herald and another appearing in the New Brunswick Telegraph Journal, AIMS President Brian Lee Crowley outlines the importance of the C.D. Howe research on the political motivation behind ACOA spending. According to the figures released in Brooking No Favourites by Jack Mintz and Michael Smart and the subsequent AIMS document ACOA Watch, the total of grants and contributions from the Atlantic Canada Opportunities Agency peak just before the federal election calls.
Study slams ACOA record
Media was quick to respond to the release of AIMS second publication of ACOA Watch: Locking Up the Pork Barrel. In two articles, one from the Ottawa Bureau of the Halifax Chronicle Herald and another appearing in the New Brunswick Telegraph Journal, AIMS President Brian Lee Crowley outlines the importance of the C.D. Howe research on the political motivation behind ACOA spending. According to the figures released in Brooking No Favourites by Jack Mintz and Michael Smart and the subsequent AIMS document ACOA Watch, the total of grants and contributions from the Atlantic Canada Opportunities Agency peak just before the federal election calls.
AIMS On-Line December 16, 2003
What's New at Atlantic Canada's Public Policy Think Tank
AIMS Releases ACOA Watch #2: Locking Up the Pork Barrel
Examines new evidence of the politicization of ACOA spending
New Brunswick’s second Bricklin
In the never-never land of government-inspired "economic development," a sprinkling of pixie dust and a new name can rehabilitate discredited old ideas. Despite its dismal record at picking "winners" such as the Bricklin sports car, the New Brunswick government has recently decided to mould business "clusters" across its industrial landscape in the form of the "Plastics Valley" of North America. AIMS Director of Research comments in the National Post
Experts optimistic despite upswing in N.S. jobless rate
Nova Scotia's unemployment rate rose in November, but the reasons hold promise for the provincial economy. Statistic Canada reported the province's unemployment rate last month rose to 10.1 per cent, up from October's 9.5. The national trend rate fell slightly to 7.5. the provincial economy actually added 6,000 jobs -- most of them part-time -- in November, while losing another 3,000, a net gain of 3,000. But more importantly, another 6,300 people joined the workforce, driving up the participation rate. Brian Lee Crowley, president of the Atlantic Institute of Market Studies says the fact that more people have entered the workforce is a positive sign for the province.