[homeles_ot-l] The Economic Impact of Social Assistance in Hamilton FW: We invest in roads; why not people?
Linda Lalonde
linda_lalonde_ottawa at yahoo.com
Thu Jul 7 00:11:36 EDT 2011
Here's the link to the report:
http://ottawa.ca/calendar/ottawa/citycouncil/occ/2005/04-13/hrss/ACS2005-CPS-EFA-0001.htm
Linda.
--- On Wed, 7/6/11, Linda Lalonde <linda_lalonde_ottawa at yahoo.com> wrote:
Hi Lynne,
There was a report done on either the 5th or 10th anniversary (I'm leaning towards the 10th)of the Harris cuts on the social and economic impact of the cuts in Ottawa, not just on recipients but on the local economy and service providers. It was from the angle 'what happens if you cut benefits' rather than 'what are the positives when you pay benefits' but that's really two sides of the same coin.
I'll try and pull up that report - I know I have it somewhere. I think this would be a very interesting piece of work for some social work and economics students. It would certainly produce a very good community engagement tool for the SAReview, the provincial election and beyond.
Linda.
--- On Wed, 7/6/11, Lynne Browne <lbrowne at ysb.on.ca> wrote:
Hello everyone . . . here’s a very useful economic analysis with both provincial and Hamilton data, made available through the Homeless Hub as people prepare for the Ottawa consultation for Social Assistance Review on July 27th. Has anyone seen info like this for Ottawa?
Lynne Browne
Coordinator, Alliance to End Homelessness
613-241-7913 ext. 205, lbrowne at ysb.on.ca
From: The Homeless Hub [mailto:thehub at edu.yorku.ca]
Sent: July-06-11 2:41 PM
To: Lynne Browne
Subject: We invest in roads; why not people?
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WE INVEST IN ROADS; WHY NOT PEOPLE?
Social-service spending is an investment with demonstrable returns
by Econometric Research Limited
There is a general presumption that Social Assistance in Ontario or elsewhere, whether through Ontario Works (OW) or ODSP benefits, is a general burden on the tax payers in the province with no or little benefits for the people of Ontario beyond the small cohort receiving it. The results of the economic impact analysis we undertook show that this is not true. Rather, the expenditures the beneficiaries make (incidentally it is typically the case that the recipients of these benefits spend all what they receive) in the local economy tend to generate significant impacts in both the local and provincial economies.
Read the full report >
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