The Alberta Government announced today what amounts to subsidies for the provinces oil and gas companies expected to amount to $172 million in 2009 rising to $512 million in 2013.
See:
http://alberta.ca/home/NewsFrame.cfm?ReleaseID=/acn/200811/24794B6951691-B6CE-E573-6C373FBC2DE15150.html
The rationale is that these royalty breaks or transfer of wealth from taxpayers to the oil/gas sector and private industry will trickle down the economy. Whether we are talking oil/gas companies, banks, packing plants, feedlots or the automobile sector the fact is trickle down does not work. For instance the oil and gas sector has just come off a period of unprecedented profitability. They already have the money to reinvest in the economy. A lack of cash flow and another ½ billion is not the problem.
Investment decisions are based on the expectation of future profits and not on past performance. Money flows or does not flow evenly through the economy but instead is directed or diverted by competitiveness. Competitiveness is how a company like Cargill can be profitable even in a supply or value chain where other participants are losing money. Competitiveness is a means where Cargill and organizations such as Cargill whether we are talking Esso, CIBC or Toyota are able to maintain a profit instead of having all the profit trickle down the value chain to the other sector participants like employees, suppliers, consumers.
The fact is that subsidizing the corporate sector may benefit shareholders but few others. Corporations will continue to make investment decisions based on profit maximization (not a dirty word by the way) and not on what is best for the larger economy or other industry stakeholders.
For instance within 1½ months the larger players in the feedlot sector (including the packing plants) will receive a another government cheque in excess of $1 million dollars. That cheque may not and probably will not trickle down to the cow calf producer but will go to where it can profit the feedlot the most. That may be more land, pay down debt, or divert that million to other divisions within the feedlot like the grain operation and a new combine, silage cutter or trucks. That money may even be directed out of Canada. It will only be used to buy Canadian calves if buying those calves is the most profitable use of the money and buying calves will only be the most profitable use of the money if the price of calves is low enough.
Otherwise the government support dollars will be directed towards other more profitable uses such as paying down debt, possibly buying calves in the U.S. or investing off farm or increasing dividends. All organizations will use what competitive advantage they enjoy to keep money within their organization to fuel further profits or to benefit shareholders rather than trickle down the value chain beyond the organization.
There is a discussion of trickle down at:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trickle-down_economics
There is a good discussion of competitiveness at:
http://www.ces.purdue.edu/extmedia/ec/ec-722.pdf
See:
http://alberta.ca/home/NewsFrame.cfm?ReleaseID=/acn/200811/24794B6951691-B6CE-E573-6C373FBC2DE15150.html
The rationale is that these royalty breaks or transfer of wealth from taxpayers to the oil/gas sector and private industry will trickle down the economy. Whether we are talking oil/gas companies, banks, packing plants, feedlots or the automobile sector the fact is trickle down does not work. For instance the oil and gas sector has just come off a period of unprecedented profitability. They already have the money to reinvest in the economy. A lack of cash flow and another ½ billion is not the problem.
Investment decisions are based on the expectation of future profits and not on past performance. Money flows or does not flow evenly through the economy but instead is directed or diverted by competitiveness. Competitiveness is how a company like Cargill can be profitable even in a supply or value chain where other participants are losing money. Competitiveness is a means where Cargill and organizations such as Cargill whether we are talking Esso, CIBC or Toyota are able to maintain a profit instead of having all the profit trickle down the value chain to the other sector participants like employees, suppliers, consumers.
The fact is that subsidizing the corporate sector may benefit shareholders but few others. Corporations will continue to make investment decisions based on profit maximization (not a dirty word by the way) and not on what is best for the larger economy or other industry stakeholders.
For instance within 1½ months the larger players in the feedlot sector (including the packing plants) will receive a another government cheque in excess of $1 million dollars. That cheque may not and probably will not trickle down to the cow calf producer but will go to where it can profit the feedlot the most. That may be more land, pay down debt, or divert that million to other divisions within the feedlot like the grain operation and a new combine, silage cutter or trucks. That money may even be directed out of Canada. It will only be used to buy Canadian calves if buying those calves is the most profitable use of the money and buying calves will only be the most profitable use of the money if the price of calves is low enough.
Otherwise the government support dollars will be directed towards other more profitable uses such as paying down debt, possibly buying calves in the U.S. or investing off farm or increasing dividends. All organizations will use what competitive advantage they enjoy to keep money within their organization to fuel further profits or to benefit shareholders rather than trickle down the value chain beyond the organization.
There is a discussion of trickle down at:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trickle-down_economics
There is a good discussion of competitiveness at:
http://www.ces.purdue.edu/extmedia/ec/ec-722.pdf
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