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Killing with kindness...?

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    Killing with kindness...?

    How equalization kills with kindness
    Peter Holle
    For the Calgary Herald
    Saturday, September 16, 2006


    Those Albertans who understand Canada's equalization program might agree in principle with sharing the wealth with have-not provinces. But a growing body of evidence shows that equalization perpetuates dependency by paying provinces not to pull up their policy socks. It's the kindness that kills.

    As their uptake of subsidies has increased, the growth rates and competitive positions of have-nots have declined. The more they receive, the more they lag behind. The extra money has inflated their public sectors and allowed them to maintain unattractive tax, investment and regulatory regimes. The obtuse equalization formula reduces transfers if taxes are cut or government assets and organizations sold.

    With 20 per cent of its budget from equalization, Manitoba is a particularly tragic casualty. Once the third largest city in Canada, Winnipeg's now ranked eighth. Downtown office vacancies are rising as corporate headquarters have followed more favourable tax policies to places such as Calgary.

    The only construction this summer is an unneeded tower for the lethargic crown, Manitoba Hydro. As a percentage of per capita GDP, Manitoba has the most expensive public schools and close to the most costly health-care system in the country. Despite the funding bonanza, both report mediocre outcomes.

    Absorbed by government personnel and salaries, the money does not flow into education or health, or into Manitoba's ramshackle streets and highways.

    Mature, highly unionized government bureaucracies dominate the list of Winnipeg's top 10 employers. Government spending accounts for half the economy -- a far cry from 1965, when the province had the smallest government in western Canada and comparatively robust growth.

    The only western province with a provincial payroll tax, Manitoba maintains a hopelessly uncompetitive top income tax rate of 17.4 per cent, compared to Alberta's 10 per cent. In a time of angst over

    energy consumption, Manitoba Hydro counterproductively sells domestic electricity at cost. That's supposed to attract factories but demonstrably does not.

    Imagine if Alberta sold its $70 oil for $30 and looked to outsiders to pay for public services. The policy loses Manitoba about a billion dollars in lost annual revenue, a sizable portion of the $1.6 billion boodle from equalization.

    In effect, Alberta and Ontario pay Manitoba to underprice a valuable resource, which in turn promotes profligate overconsumption. The same applies in Quebec, which receives almost half of Canada's total equalization payout. So this "help" also hurts the environment. Despite several advantages, including Canada's most diversified economy, renewable energy wealth and high-skilled labour, Manitoba's young people and skilled brainpower head west.

    Unless you are Manitoba's NDP, with its natural powerbase in a sprawling, old-style public sector, fortune and opportunity lie elsewhere. To be fair to Premier Gary Doer, the most enthusiastic apostle of more equalization, the current formula directly penalizes policies which encourage economic growth.

    The fastest growth occurs when government consumes 30 per cent of the economy. Past that sweet spot, growth slows steadily. Alberta grows faster because its state sector is closer to the optimal size. In contrast, Manitoba, Quebec and the Maritimes are far beyond, permanently stuck in a slow-growth purgatory.

    Pressured by cutthroat international competition and rising energy costs, Ontario recently rejected an expansion of equalization. That's a blessing in disguise. Alberta can easily afford to keep the have-nots on the dole, but it should back out on humanitarian grounds and push for reforms that give have-nots at least some prospect for self-sustaining economies and modern policy models.

    The federal government could liberate Manitoba by swapping equalization for debt. Another, more complicated approach would be to fiddle with clawbacks by reducing payments in proportion to relative public sector inefficiency -- difficult but not impossible. In Manitoba and Quebec's case, Ottawa could slash equalization in direct proportion to electricity subsidies.

    We need to recognize that equalization's noble intentions have not been met and radically rethink it. Alberta should show some leadership and push for a model of transformational equalization that stops killing Manitoba with kindness.

    Peter Holle is president of the Frontier Centre for Public Policy (www.fcpp.org), an independent think-tank based in Winnipeg.

    © The Calgary Herald 2006

    #2
    Do you not think that the article reflects a bit of right-wing baloney?

    I do.

    Comment


      #3
      Yeh about 1%! The rest is all truth.

      Comment


        #4
        Coming from Manitoba, I agree that the NDP government is killing the economy. The conservatives before weren't much better either. It's embarassing to be in the last western have-not province.

        I'm not sure though that I would suggest privatizing hydro after the disasters in Ontario, Alberta and California. I haven't seen it work well enough to suggest it should happen here.

        The only other thing I take issue with is that somehow, Albertans are better managers than the other provinces. When you've got billions in oil revenue coming in every year due to the good fortune of geography, it doesn't take a lot of brains to balance a budget.

        Comment


          #5
          Zaphod, geography has not made Alberta...many years of favorable policy has!

          If it where only oil that has made Alberta prosperous, then Venezuela would be wealthy and Japan would be poor.

          Saskatchewan has oil too but we just don’t let anybody have at it.

          Some who live in Alberta don't get it ...and never will.

          Comment


            #6
            ivbinCONned: Alberta has been practically giving its oil away with low royalty schemes. Saskatchewan is smart not to follow Alberta's example.

            Pretty soon, our resources will be depleted and THEN your oil can be exploited as well.

            Our conventional natural gas is whistling out of this province so fast that we will not be able to meet out export commitments in the near future.

            Hold on to your resources...Saskatchewan is a COLD province in duh winter time. You may have noticed this from time to time.

            Cheers...

            Comment


              #7
              Wilagro: Sure is good to know that the NDP has the solution to keeping that oil and gas banked for the future! I guess they could teach us all about "good government" and creating prosperity?
              I wouldn't get too worried about the oil and gas running out in yours or mine lifetimes! I've been hearing that BS since I was just a kid and thats about what it is...BS!
              Should we be getting more royalties out of our gas and oil? Yes we should, but at the same time look at all the activity and wealth creation that is going on in this province? Higher royalties would produce what? Would the government allow the people of Alberta their fair share or would they funnel it into the black holes of medi care and education? Personally I'd just as soon let the oil companies have it as blow it into social programs that have no accountability and a thirst for more and more money! At least the oil company passes it around a bit!

              Comment


                #8
                The Alberta gov't has preached 'value-added' for years but when it comes to oil and gas, they look the other way and ship 'er all out, most of it RAW or nearly so.

                The Americans know how to make a buck and they are really cleaning up in Alberta. Economic activity is one thing, but when we end up with the crumbs AND the pollution, then I say that it is time that we changed our policies.

                Comment


                  #9
                  What is the advantage of value added...if you get less for the product?
                  How smart is it to "value add" at a loss?
                  Thank God the oil and gas companys aren't that stupid.

                  Comment


                    #10
                    cowman you better attend one of the leadership forums and ask which one of the candidates opposes value added.....bet it's pretty silent !!

                    Comment


                      #11
                      This is just common sense? If an American offers me $700 for a calf and a Canadian offers me $600, who do you think I am going to sell to? Do you think I should sell for less for the good of adding value to the end product?
                      I wonder if the oil companies are dumber than me? Or maybe they are like these super Canadian patriots, willing to do their part for the good of Canada?
                      The government should not be involved in picking winners and losers in private business? Wasn't that the PC mantra? Get government out of business?
                      What politicians say during an election campaign...and what they actually do are two different things? Do we really want to go back to the days when government lost billions on all these boondoggles?

                      Comment


                        #12
                        cowman, we have one leadership candidate promsing to address the issues within the forestry sector by REVIEWING the stumpage fees, which already are nothing short of a pittance! Now, to me, that equates to giving away resources that belong to Albertans. What difference do you see between Albertans losing billions by selling off SML's to huge corporations like Weyerhaeuser,for next to nothing, and topping off the cost to build refineries? I have NOT heard of any candidate that is advocating provincial funds going to help build refineries by the way !

                        Don't worry, if there is big money to be made by selling refined bitumin, and companies can't make the bucks any other way, they will build whatever it takes.

                        Comment


                          #13
                          I think the point here was the companies can get more selling the raw product to American refineries than what they can make by building refineries in Alberta?
                          All very well for some politician to spout off about "We need to value add and create the jobs in Alberta"...but not really possible unless you want to violate NAFTA...or throw massive subsidies to the company!
                          The forestry thing is a scandal...and is mainly responsible for the whole softwood scandal? The American stumpage fees are quite a bit higher than in Canada. One reason we need to harmonize our systems so we have a level playing field?
                          The large American packing houses don't have to go through all the BS Canadian packers do? Might have something to do with profitability?
                          In Dodge city they hire 800 workers a day right at the gate at the Cargill plant. At the end of the day they pay them cash! A guy sits at a card table with a strongbox and two shotgun armed guards and pays the workers off! You get hurt on the job they bandage you up and throw you out the gate!

                          Comment


                            #14
                            My gawd...cowman, you sound like you are advocating 19th century capitalism where workers had no protection or rights.

                            Workers worldwide fought to improve their working conditions and YOU are supporting those who would deny these rights to today's working person.

                            I am afraid that you and I will not agree on many things, especially politics. I dare say that I won't even mention religion.

                            Comment


                              #15
                              Not advocating 19th century capitalism, just saying how it is at the Cargill plant at Dodge City.
                              Isn't one bit different with most of the consumer goods we buy? Clothes, electronics, toys etc.? All made in China at slave labor rates.
                              I didn't invent globalism, but I have to live with it just like you?
                              I think one of the mistakes people make in regard to the countries exports, is that they believe they belong to Canada...and that is just not the case? They belong to the individual business that is producing them? Now unless we want to take away personal property rights how do these "enlightened politicians" propose we keep it here? Maybe we need to put oil, lumber, cattle under some kind of organiization like the Canadian wheat board...where the farmer grows the grain but doesn't have the right to sell it to whoever he chooses? Sort of going back to the old Soviet System where the government decided how you would live? Well I guess we know how that worked out.
                              Oilmen, lumbermen, cattle ranchers and grain farmers all want to get as high a price as possible for their products? They really don't care where it goes or if the country add some jobs by processing it here? The market should decide who gets the raw product not some government rules that keep the price artificially low?

                              Comment

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