McQuaig wrote a series of books and newspaper columns. In her first book,
Behind Closed Doors (1987), she opines that members of the financial elite maintained and extended control over the country's tax policy, to their own benefit. In
The Quick and the Dead (1991) she opines what she refers to as the negative impact on Canada of the
Free Trade Agreement between Canada and the United States. Her 1993 book ''The Wealthy Banker's Wife
compared the social welfare systems of Europe with those of the United States, and suggested that Canada was veering towards the US model. Her 1995 book, Shooting the Hippo
, topped The Globe and Mail'' national best-seller list for more than two months. It argued that politicians and the business community had misled the Canadian public with claims that rising social spending was driving up the national deficit, thereby requiring the government to slash social spending. The book disputed the seriousness of the deficit and argued that the deficit's prime cause was the
Bank of Canada's anti-inflation policy, which it said had dramatically pushed up interest rates and driven the country into recession.
The Cult of Impotence (1998) disputed the notion that countries had no alternative but to submit to corporate demands for deep tax cuts and reduced social spending—or wealth-holders would move their capital offshore. In
All You Can Eat (2001), McQuaig looked at how the new international financial rules and trade deals were in her view ensconcing a radical form of capitalism, leading to deep inequality and the disempowerment of the people. Drawing on the work of economic historian and anthropologist
Karl Polanyi, McQuaig argued that the new capitalism was not part of a natural evolution but rather a deliberately imposed redesign of society at odds with the basic human need for community. ''It's The Crude, Dude: War, Big Oil and the Fight for the Planet'' (2004) argued that the quest for oil had shaped US foreign policy, culminating in George W Bush's
2003 invasion of Iraq, even as global warming was making it imperative for the world to curb oil consumption. ''It's the Crude, Dude: Greed, Gas, War and the American Way
(2006) is a version of her 2004 book with added information. In Holding the Bully's Coat: Canada and the US Empire'' (2007), McQuaig argued that Canada should stop supporting the US in its role of what she calls an imperial power. In
The Trouble with Billionaires (2010), McQuaig and co-author Neil Brooks, a professor of tax policy at
Osgoode Hall Law School in Toronto, examined the rise of the billionaire class and what they called its negative impact on society, and argued for a much more progressive tax system. ''Billionaires' Ball: Gluttony and Hubris in an Age of Epic Inequality'' (2012) is a version of the same book with an emphasis on U.S. economic policies. McQuaig's newspaper columns focus on issues like the importance of maintaining a strong social safety net, and on what she argues are the detrimental effects of privatization, trade and globalization, and the influence of money in politics. ==Books==