平特五不中

Sign up for email updates about MAX Policy

To the right, a black and white picture of a bearded man pointing at sticky notes on a white board, with his shadow reflecting on the board. To the left, a black and white picture of the hands of three speakers who are sitting at a Max Bell Conference panel. There are red square overlays on the collage.
MAX Policy is a collection of provocative ideas and policy solutions generated by the minds at the Max Bell School of Public Policy.

Chris Ragan on the Bank of Canada's Mandate

22 Nov 2021

Interviewed by Sean Speer, Chris Ragan outlines the history of the Bank of Canada's agreement with the federal government leading up to the mandate's expiration in January 2022.

Jennifer Welsh on Foreign Policy in Afghanistan

9 Nov 2021

For the millions of Afghans who remain in crisis, the narrative that defines their situation could impact the stability of their future.

Steve Ambler: Why the Bank of Canada Should Target Nominal GDP Rather than Inflation

2 Aug 2021

By targeting the nominal GDP, the Bank can propagate economic recovery and create a more robust monetary policy.

Paisley Sim: COVID-19 Policy Stringency across Provinces

6 May 2021

Provincial policy responses and outcomes have been highly divergent and the coordination benefits of federalism have been unevenly leveraged.

Facing Newfoundland and Labrador鈥檚 Fiscal Challenges

6 Apr 2021

Newfoundland and Labrador have highest debt burden of all provinces. Don Drummond and Louis L茅vesque unpack the difficult choices the province faces to get back on track.

Ken Boessenkool on Getting a Triple Dividend from a Carbon Tax

19 Mar 2021

The new federal climate plan is bold, but shows a lack of confidence in carbon pricing that will end up hampering economic growth.

John Stewart: How is Nuclear Energy Like Immigration and Free Trade?

1 Mar 2021

John Stewart takes a look at the links between public opinion and the past, present and future of nuclear energy.

Ian Peach Argues for Reform of How Indigenous Communities Are Policed

4 Feb 2021

Indigenous people in Canada are too rarely the beneficiaries of a community-based approach to policing. That needs to change.

Pages

Presented by Interac

惭础齿听笔辞濒颈肠测听and the Policy Lab are supported by Interac, Canada's most trusted payment system.

Max Bell School of Public Policy white lettering and logo on black background

Subscribe to Max Bell School policy briefings from our experts聽and other news

Back to top