National Post

Make Ontario energy affordable again

- Mark Milke Mark Milke is a writer for Canadians for Affordable Energy and author of Tax Me I’m Canadian: A Taxpayers’ Guide to Your Money and How Politician­s Spend it.

Back in 2016, Torontobas­ed Leland Industries announced it would no longer expand in Ontario but instead do so in Illinois. Relevant fact: Illinois businesses are themselves fleeing to nearby U.S. states. The reason: Illinois’ business and personal taxes make it an expensive place to do business.

That an Ontario company would neverthele­ss still prefer to expand in high-tax Illinois tells us all we need to know about how costly it has become to remain in Ontario. And that brings us to Ontario premier-designate Doug Ford’s promise to scrap the last government’s carbon cap-and-trade plan and oppose any federal attempt to impose a carbon tax on the province’s economy.

Ford’s promise was a key plank and a critical reason why he and 75 colleagues were elected to government. Many voters feel like guinea pigs in disastrous power policy experiment­s that led to an unnecessar­y doubling of power prices over the past dozen years.

That would explain one May poll that found 72 per cent of Ontarians viewed carbon taxes as just another tax grab.

Symbolism is a high price to pay for experiment­s that don’t work. As economist Germain Belzile and I found in a recent paper for the Montreal Economic Institute, carbon prices would have to rise dramatical­ly to have any effect upon personal and business behaviour.

For example, to meet current cap-and-trade greenhouse-gas reductions in the transporta­tion sector (a 40-per-cent cut, as per the Paris climate accord) gasoline pump prices would have to soar by 67 per cent. A litre of gasoline that already costs $1.35 in Toronto would be $2.25. An already expensive $80 fill-up for a 60-litre tank today would cost $135. With a weekly fill, an annual gasoline bill would soar from $4,200 to over $7,000.

Now multiply that hike in pump prices across other goods and the entire economy: Bus passes, home heating fuels and food costs are among other items that would spike. It would hit and hurt the poor most of all given that their incomes, by definition, are most limited.

And here’s the other consequenc­e: No overall reduction in greenhouse gas emissions would be realized. Raise carbon prices to punitive levels and businesses would flee to American states and other countries where they do not face any carbon pricing. That means world emissions would just continue to rise even as Canadian jobs disappear.

The hit on the poor, and the carbon leakage, are ignored by the tireless enthusiast­s of cap-and-trade and carbon-tax schemes. They want Ford to chop his campaign promise to kill capand-trade.

One commentato­r in Maclean’s, Justin Ling, called the promise “fundamenta­lly flawed,” disputing Ford’s claim that Ontario’s wealth is being shifted to California under cap-and-trade. “That’s just not true,” writes Ling. But it is true: Ontario’s auditor general has pointed out that Ontario will send $466 million to Quebec and California in 2020 under the current scheme. That could rise to $2.2 billion by 2030.

Others wonder how the businesses that now receive proceeds from the carbon tax will make do absent such green subsidies. In other words, lobbyists demand that Ontarians be forced to keep a flawed scheme because these same rentseeker­s were successful in gaming the system in the past: Other businesses and consumers pay; the lobbyists and their clients benefit with padded bottom lines.

And some argue that Ontario cannot afford to cut cap-and-trade or forgo proceeds from a carbon tax. Oh, please. Enough already.

Ontario will spend $158 billion this year. To forgo “Carbon Allowance Proceeds” of $2 billion, Ford’s government must trim spending by 1.3 per cent. Of note, recall various reports on corporate welfare from the Ontario auditor general, economist Don Drummond and from a previously secret Ontario government blueribbon panel. The latter estimated direct subsidies to business and sector-by-sector specific tax credits (corporate welfare by another name) worth $5 billion annually. Given that Ford also promised to cut at least some corporate welfare, that is how his government can finance the revenue hit from forgone carbon proceeds.

Ford has said repealing Ontario’s carbon tax will be his new government’s first priority, “the very first item will be to pass an order to cancel the Liberal cap-andtrade carbon tax.” Good, because to do otherwise would continue to send businesses fleeing from Ontario, reward corporate rent seeking and punish Ontarians on low and fixed incomes.

 ?? NATHAN DENETTE / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Ontario premier-designate Doug Ford has promised to scrap the province’s carbon tax and trade program.
NATHAN DENETTE / THE CANADIAN PRESS Ontario premier-designate Doug Ford has promised to scrap the province’s carbon tax and trade program.

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