National Post

The ballooning costs of Ontario’s government

- Lammam charles Ben Eisen and Charles Lammam and Ben Eisen are analysts with the Fraser Institute.

With a projected $4.3-billion deficit this year and relentless­ly mounting debt, the Wynne government needs to better control spending to repair the damage to Ontario’s finances.

A key area of spending to scrutinize is the wages and benefits of government employees, which are responsibl­e for roughly half of Ontario government program spending each year.

There’s ample reason to better control compensati­on costs. While the government must provide competitiv­e compensati­on to attract qualified employees, the wages and benefits of government employees tend to eclipse those for comparable private-sector positions.

A new Fraser Institute study spotlights the wage premium enjoyed by government employees in Ontario at all levels ( federal, provincial and local).

Using Statistics Canada data from 2015, the study finds that government employees receive, on average, 13.4- per- cent higher wages than comparable workers in the private sector. This wage premium accounts for difference­s between individual workers in the two sectors such as age, gender, education, tenure, experience, and type of work.

But wages are just one component of total compensati­on, which includes pensions, early retirement and job security.

As any business owner or manager will tell you, it’s the total cost of compensati­on that matters rather than the individual components.

Yet even on various nonwage benefits, the available Statistics Canada data suggests government employees i n Ontario come out ahead.

First consider the imbalance on pensions, one of the costliest benefits provided to workers in both sectors.

In 2015, eight of 10 government workers in Ontario ( 79.7 per cent) were covered by a defined-benefit pension plan — which guarantees a level of benefits in retirement — compared to just one of 10 workers in the private sector (11.4 per cent).

Government-sector workers in Ontario also retire, on average, 1.4 years earlier than private-sector workers. Furthermor­e, they are away from their jobs for personal reasons 60- per- cent more days per year (10.9 days versus 6.8 days in the private sector).

When it comes to job security, another non- wage benefit, government workers have a distinct advantage.

In 2015, 3.2 per cent of private- sector employment in Ontario experience­d job loss — six times higher than the 0.5 per cent of government­sector employment.

So what drives this disparity in wages and benefits?

The reason is twofold. In the government sector, political factors largely determine the wage- setting process, while economic realities — productivi­ty concerns, market forces, hard budget constraint­s — guide the process in the private sector.

Moreover, the monopoly environmen­t of the government sector amplifies these difference­s, compared to the competitiv­e environmen­t of the private sector.

This is more than just a fiscal issue. It’s about fairness, too.

Why should government employees receive a premium paid for by privatesec­tor workers who receive less for similar positions?

Taking the politics out of the wage-setting process will help level the playing field between government and private-sector workers.

This can be done by enacting measures that link the wages and benefits of government employees to similar positions in the private sector.

Doing so would allow all government­s ( i ncluding Ontario’s) to better control spending, rein in debt, and maintain fairness for taxpayers who ultimately foot the bill.

 ?? CRAIG ROBERTSON / POSTMEDIA NEWS FILES ?? Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne.
CRAIG ROBERTSON / POSTMEDIA NEWS FILES Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne.

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