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Gregory C. Mason

Research and teaching in public-policy

  • Publications
    • Agricultural Commentary
    • Articles (academic)
    • Chapters in Books
    • Current Research and Working Papers
    • Book Reviews
    • Technical Reports & Monographs
    • Workshops & Presentations
  • Guiding the Invisible Hand
    • Commentary
    • Israel
  • Teaching
    • Resources for students
    • Economic Analytics Using Computer Methods
    • Experiments in AI
  • ISER
  • Economic Analytics
    • Methodology Notes
  • Mincome
  • PRA INC.

Op Ed

Mad Cow disease holds surprising lessons

June 1, 2017 by Gregory Mason

The BSE crisis teaches us lessons to this day. For most of us, the year 2003 is of no importance. However, an event occurred then that holds useful lessons in the current political and economic environment. Read the full article … [Read more...] about Mad Cow disease holds surprising lessons

Private MRIs won’t endanger health care

May 3, 2017 by Gregory Mason

What do pizza joints and MRIs have in common? Read the full article … [Read more...] about Private MRIs won’t endanger health care

The economy of useless things

April 10, 2017 by Gregory Mason

The robots are coming! The robots are coming! Many social commentators raise alarms about impending technology induced job losses. The vision is dire — professional jobs in accountancy, law and medicine are all on the chopping block in the face of technical change that threatens to turn humanity into couch potatoes on minimum income, binge watching streaming TV. This … [Read more...] about The economy of useless things

Structural approach needed for budgets

March 18, 2017 by Gregory Mason

This is the season for taxes and brave promises. Taxes are inevitable, but is it not time to ask our finance ministers to stop spinning fairy tales? On the left hand, many see government spending as good and taxes as financing the "essential" services of the modern public sector. On the other hand, those on the right advocate for reduced services and taxes, resulting in a … [Read more...] about Structural approach needed for budgets

Basic income, child benefits best bet to reduce poverty

March 1, 2017 by Gregory Mason

Poverty — especially child poverty — is pernicious. The latest research reported in Scientific American shows children born into low-income situations experience a range of intellectual deficits compared to their counterparts raised in homes at a higher socioeconomic status (SES). Poverty is also persistent. Children born to a low-SES family start the foot race of … [Read more...] about Basic income, child benefits best bet to reduce poverty

Revisiting Manitoba’s basic-income experiment

January 23, 2017 by Gregory Mason

There seems to be a persistent misunderstanding and mythology surrounding the Manitoba Basic Annual Income Experiment — or Mincome, as it came to be known. With the recent publication of a working paper on the Ontario Basic Annual Income and the universal basic income experiment about to begin in Finland, it is time to review Manitoba’s experience with a basic income, also … [Read more...] about Revisiting Manitoba’s basic-income experiment

University teaching methods mired in the past

December 30, 2016 by Gregory Mason

With the cessation of the recent labour action by the University of Manitoba Faculty Association, it is an opportune time to reflect on why the strike occurred. It is tempting to see this issue in classic Marxist terms, where the workers (faculty with salaries ranging from $75,000 to $140,000 per year) defend their rights against administrators who have been captured by a … [Read more...] about University teaching methods mired in the past

Forget rights,  focus on obligations

December 5, 2016 by Gregory Mason

Whenever I go for a walk, my feet each claim credit for any forward momentum.  My right foot says it has all the initiative and is the real driver for my progress.  It sometimes complains that my left foot just tags along, not doing the heavy lifting. My left foot replies that it plans where we should go and without its direction the right foot would carry me off … [Read more...] about Forget rights,  focus on obligations

Rescuing economy requires risk, individual responsibility

November 21, 2016 by Gregory Mason

So much gnashing of teeth has occurred in the last week as almost every pundit pours over survey data trying to understand what happened on November 8.  Social commentators and other shamans sift through the entrails of our culture trying to make sense of the unthinkable election.  Half of North America seems to be in grief counselling. The answer is much easier to … [Read more...] about Rescuing economy requires risk, individual responsibility

Political boundaries make little sense

November 4, 2016 by Gregory Mason

I enjoy driving to Saskatchewan.  As I pass Virden, I do not need the sign welcoming me to Saskatchewan to know I am in another province.  No, I can tell by the quaint provincial costumes that so uniquely mark the provinces of Canada.  The purple hats and the lime green leggings of Saskatchewan men are a sure tip-off that I am in a different place. This is … [Read more...] about Political boundaries make little sense

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Latest Commentary

Inflation is bred to the bone Copy

January 31, 2024 By Greg Mason

Financial Post, September 28, 2022 The current spike in inflation has its origin in the pandemic, which in one respect is good news: supply chains will eventually unclog and pent-up spending will abate, either because interest rates bite or financial markets force governments to pare back. Read more

Inflation is bred to the bone

October 19, 2022 By Greg Mason

Financial Post, September 28, 2022 The current spike in inflation has its origin in the pandemic, which in one respect is good news: supply chains will eventually unclog and pent-up spending will abate, either because interest rates bite or financial markets force governments to pare back. Read more

Time for an adult conversation about taxes

September 21, 2022 By Greg Mason

Winnipeg Free Press, September 2, 2022 Earlier this year while cleaning out some old files I found my property tax assessment from 1993. I  had just received my 2022 assessment, and my economist’s “spidy” sense tingled. This mental itch kicks in when we economists compare costs and prices over time – we automatically adjust for […]

To boost or not to boost?

August 14, 2022 By Greg Mason

Winnipeg Free Press, August 1, 2022 With apologies to The Clash, that iconic band from the 80s, “Darling you got to let me know, Should I vaxx or should I wait?” Let us be clear. I am a vaccine enthusiast. When the shingles vaccine became available, I was there in a flash. I get the […]

The search for the truth never ends

May 31, 2022 By Greg Mason

Winnipeg Free Press, May 30, 2022 Tributes to David Milgaard all highlight the strength of an individual who persevered through more that two decades of imprisonment for a murder he never committed. His mother Joyce Milgaard, Lloyd Axworthy, and the lawyer who believed his story, Hersch Wolch, deserve recognition for their efforts in righting a […]

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About

Specializing in economic policy, the basic annual income, health economics, and Indigenous economics, Greg joined the Department of Economics at the University of Manitoba in 1974. Recently he has written on the economics of COVID, telemedicine, electronic health records, the modern annuity, and urban reserves.

Recent

  • Inflation is bred to the bone Copy
  • Inflation is bred to the bone
  • Time for an adult conversation about taxes
  • To boost or not to boost?
  • The search for the truth never ends

Copyright © 2025 Gregory C. Mason