Private Property in Peril: Ontario Businessmen and the Federal System, 1898–1911*
Christopher Armstrong and
H. V. Nelles
Business History Review, 1973, vol. 47, issue 2, 158-176
Abstract:
Two opposing groups of business interests — large, internationally-oriented financiers on the one hand and local businessmen and small manufacturers on the other — engaged in economically-based political conflict over the proper nature of the federal system in early twentieth-century Canada. The national financial community proved unable to protect its conception of private property rights by legal and political means at the national level, and the resulting victory of provincial rather than federal control over property rights made possible the creation of a publicly owned hydro-electric system in Ontario.
Date: 1973
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:cup:buhirw:v:47:y:1973:i:02:p:158-176_02
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