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Full Description
An exposé of the reality of Saskatchewan's potash industry management—prioritizing private profit over public interest
A single province in Canada—Saskatchewan—is blessed with a remarkable birthright: 50% of the world's potash reserves.
Potassium is a necessary ingredient of the fertilizer required to feed a growing world population. Accordingly, prices and corporate profits have soared to unprecedented levels in recent decades. While other countries such as Saudi Arabia and Norway have taken steps to capture the value of their natural resources for their people, Saskatchewan has failed to leverage the value of its potash and has given much of it up for an inadequate price.
Billions of dollars of forgone revenue has resulted in tax unfairness, program underfunding and malfunction, and a growing and worrying divide between the affluent and the very poor. Analysts from across the political spectrum have identified this revenue problem, as well as a straightforward solution. Unfortunately, the Saskatchewan government has declined to review the situation and instead seems to rely upon the advice of the industry itself. The province now faces the game-changing issue of how to tax appropriately the small number of multinational conglomerates that now own these potash mines. Whether or not the province obtains reasonable value for its potash will determine whether Saskatchewan will be a place of opportunity for all of its citizens or continue on a path of wealth for a few and extreme poverty for many.
Contents
List of Tables
Preface
Introduction
Chapter 1: The Importance of Potash
Chapter 2: Branch Plant Potash Mine Development
Chapter 3: Public Ownership through the Potash Corporation of Saskatchewan
Chapter 4: Privatization of the Potash Corporation of Saskatchewan
Chapter 5: Potash Mines Can't Be Moved to Chicago
Chapter 6: Integration of the Potash Corporation of Saskatchewan into Nutrien
Chapter 7: Consequences of Choices Made in 1989, 2010, and 2018
Chapter 8: The Profits of Potash
Chapter 9: Fixing the Potash Tax Problem
Chapter 10: Corporate Windfall, Saskatchewan Shortfall
Conclusion
Acknowledgements
Appendix A: Value of Potash Sales and Payments to Public Treasury, 1962-2022
Appendix B: Potash Production Volume and Average Price, 1997-2022
Notes
Bibliography
Index



