Motto | Essential Policy Intelligence |
---|---|
Formation | 1958 |
Type | Public policy think tank |
Headquarters | 67 Yonge Street, Toronto, Ontario, Canada |
Key people
|
William B.P. Robson President & Chief Executive Officer |
Website | www.cdhowe.org |
The C.D. Howe Institute (French: Institut C.D. Howe) is a nonprofit policy research organization in the Trader's Bank Building, at 67 Yonge Street, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
The Institute publishes research that is national in scope and hosts events across Canada on a wide variety of issues in economic and social policy. As a non-profit, politically independent organization, its official mandate is to improve the standard of living for Canadians through sound public policy solutions.
The Institute has won five Doug Purvis Prizes, which are awarded annually by the nonpartisan Canadian Economics Association to the authors of highly significant Canadian economic policy, and one Donner Prize (runner-up three times), which are awarded annually by the Donner Canadian Foundation for the Best Public Policy Book by a Canadian.
The C.D. Howe Institute’s origins go back to Montreal in 1958 when a group of prominent business and labour leaders organized the Private Planning Association of Canada (PPAC) to research and promote educational activities on issues related to public economic policy. In 1973, the PPAC’s assets and activities became part of the C.D. Howe Memorial Foundation, created in 1961 to memorialize the late Right Honourable Clarence Decatur Howe. The new organization operated as the C.D. Howe Research Institute until 1982, when the Memorial Foundation chose to focus directly on memorializing C.D. Howe; the Institute then adopted its current name: the C.D. Howe Institute.
The Institute's research has been cited by Liberal, New Democrat and Conservative members of parliament. The media has described the Institute as a centrist,conservative, non-partisan,think tank. It has a history of publishing research on both sides of the ideological spectrum, provided it is supported with empirical evidence. It has been described as having a "deep intellectual grounding to its public-policy approach."
The institute derives the majority of its funding from membership fees paid by corporations as well as individuals in the business, professional and academic fields.