Edmonton Journal

NDP should recall the lessons of the ‘Chretien Consensus’

Fiscal discipline spurs growth, write Ben Eisen, Steve Lafleur and Jason Clemens

- Ben Eisen, Steve Lafleur and Jason Clemens are analysts at the Fraser Institute, which recently published the book End of the Chretien Consensus?

On the eve of the Alberta budget and likely another deficit — the ninth in 10 years — it’s important to recognize that the province has been here before.

After running steep deficits for much of the mid-1980s to the early ’90s, the province’s finances were in shambles. Fortunatel­y, legislator­s recognized the severity of the problems, and were able to tackle the province’s budgetary issues, helping to unleash substantia­l economic growth. Our current legislator­s would be wise to recall the lessons of that era.

In the early 1990s, Canada’s federal and provincial government­s (including Alberta’s) faced significan­t budget deficits as well as high taxes. Back then, similar debates roiled about whether spending reductions or tax hikes were the best way to slay the deficits, driven by freespendi­ng government­s in the ’70s, ’80s and early ’90s.

These problems persisted for many years until finally, in the early ’90s, an implicit crossparti­san agreement began to emerge around the need for discipline­d spending, balanced budgets, competitiv­e taxes and smaller, smarter government. We refer to this understand­ing as the Chretien Consensus, so named because its policies were embodied by the Liberal federal government of the day under former prime minister Jean Chretien.

And the process of forming the Chretien Consensus began very close to home — next door, in Saskatchew­an. The first serious deficit eliminatio­n effort actually came from Roy Romanow’s NDP government in Regina, which reduced spending by 14.4 per cent between 1991-92 and 199697, allowing for tax reduction and reform and improved provincial competitiv­eness.

The success of the Romanow reforms helped set the stage for reforms in Alberta. Then-finance minister Jim Dinning tackled Alberta’s large budget deficit entirely through spending reductions. And those reductions were substantia­l. Over three budgets, provincial program spending was reduced 21.6 per cent. As a result, the government eliminated its deficit in just two years.

These balanced budgets and lower debt created a virtuous cycle. Interest costs decreased, both because debt was declining and because bond ratings were improving, and the increased fiscal room from lower interest costs meant some spending could be increased and taxes reformed and reduced. Key among these reforms were the introducti­on of the country’s only single-rate personal income tax and marked reductions in business taxes.

The improved fiscal outlook and more competitiv­e tax regime helped spur strong economic growth in the province.

While Alberta enjoyed a $10,543 advantage in per capita GDP (the average income per person) over other provinces in 1993, that spiked to $36,009 by 2006.

Economic growth in Alberta was so strong that by one estimate the national unemployme­nt rate would have been 2.2 percentage points higher in 2014 without Alberta’s job-creation. Alberta’s economic boom didn’t just make Alberta more prosperous; it made Canada more prosperous.

The fact the NDP Romanow government, the federal Liberal Chretien government, and the Progressiv­e Conservati­ves under Ralph Klein in Alberta all prioritize­d deficit reduction and enacted sharp spending cuts to slay large deficits speaks to the fact that during the early ’90s a broad, national, cross-party consensus on fiscal prudence was taking hold in Canada.

Unfortunat­ely, the Chretien Consensus seems to have fallen out of favour with Alberta legislator­s — again, the province will likely run its ninth deficit in 10 years — but our political leadership is increasing spending briskly and has no plans to balance the budget until sometime next decade. Meanwhile, it’s underminin­g the province’s economic competitiv­eness by raising taxes on a struggling economy.

The NDP’s approach today is reminiscen­t of the failed deficitred­uction strategies of Alberta government­s throughout the ’70s and ’80s. It’s unlikely to produce different results. By learning the lessons of history and considerin­g the lessons of the Chretien Consensus, our political leadership can find a blueprint for quickly eliminatin­g the deficit, promoting tax competitiv­eness and helping restore Alberta as an economic powerhouse in Canada.

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