http://edmontonjournal.com/opinion/columnists/frank-atkins-canadas-equalization-formula-needs-to-change-heres-why
"Under the current funding arrangements, the equalization formula does not count the market value of hydroelectric power produced in Quebec, but rather the highly subsidized price at which hydroelectric power is sold in local markets. This anomaly creates a perverse set of incentives. Power is sold in Quebec in local markets at a highly subsided price, and this reduces the amount of revenue that gets counted in the equalization formula, thus artificially increasing the amount of transfer payments received by Quebec.
The Frontier Centre for Public Policy estimates that, over the period 2005-10, if the funding formula were corrected for this anomaly, Quebec’s equalization payments would have decreased from $42.4 billion to $28.1 billion. Given that a large portion of the equalization payments have traditionally come from Alberta, which is a large producer of oil, the conclusion here is that Alberta’s transfer payments to Quebec are actually subsidizing cheap hydroelectric power in Quebec (this is also true of Manitoba’s hydroelectric power).
http://www.hydroquebec.com/residential/customer-space/account-and-billing/understanding-bill/comparison-electricity-prices.html
Open this and see the price comparisons by cities as published by "HydroQuebec".
It is a complex question: but is it time the Federation, ask for the formula to be reviewed?
"Under the current funding arrangements, the equalization formula does not count the market value of hydroelectric power produced in Quebec, but rather the highly subsidized price at which hydroelectric power is sold in local markets. This anomaly creates a perverse set of incentives. Power is sold in Quebec in local markets at a highly subsided price, and this reduces the amount of revenue that gets counted in the equalization formula, thus artificially increasing the amount of transfer payments received by Quebec.
The Frontier Centre for Public Policy estimates that, over the period 2005-10, if the funding formula were corrected for this anomaly, Quebec’s equalization payments would have decreased from $42.4 billion to $28.1 billion. Given that a large portion of the equalization payments have traditionally come from Alberta, which is a large producer of oil, the conclusion here is that Alberta’s transfer payments to Quebec are actually subsidizing cheap hydroelectric power in Quebec (this is also true of Manitoba’s hydroelectric power).
http://www.hydroquebec.com/residential/customer-space/account-and-billing/understanding-bill/comparison-electricity-prices.html
Open this and see the price comparisons by cities as published by "HydroQuebec".
It is a complex question: but is it time the Federation, ask for the formula to be reviewed?
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