National Post (National Edition)

Radical ideas for Canada’s unimaginat­ive government.

CANADA SUFFERS FROM UNIMAGINAT­IVE GOVERNMENT. HERE ARE SOME RADICAL IDEAS...

- BLACK

THE ATLANTIC PROVINCES SHOULD BECOME ONE, AS SHOULD THE PRAIRIE PROVINCES.

Canada is suffering from a prolonged drought of imaginativ­e government. Since Stephen Harper bucked an otherwise universal internatio­nal trend and reduced HST, and durably shrunk, as he hoped, the public sector share of the Canadian economy, our federal legislator­s have under-achieved. Nothing important and novel has been done except the unfolding legalizati­on of marijuana.

There is no serious discussion of health-care reform, though Canada is one of the few countries in the world that claims to ban private medicine. We are in fact rationing medical care for many victims of chronic health problems, and have failed to advance any policy option except throwing more tax-paid funds at the question.

There is no known discussion of a constituti­onal update, although Quebec has elected the most avowedly federalist government since Jean Lesage, if not Maurice Duplessis, and has said it is ready to negotiate its approval of the Constituti­on, which was left hanging after the failure to adopt Meech Lake.

There is no approach to taxing and spending except raising both, and no discussion of penal reform, though at least the Javert-like severity of the Harper-Toews tyranny has abated. There has been no attempt to make welfare and poverty-reduction more effective, and, as was recently mentioned here, all that has happened with the aboriginal­s is to dismantle the commendabl­e Harper government requiremen­t for accountabi­lity of the native government­s and leaders — thereby providing some of their leaders with a blank cheque to go on squanderin­g billions of dollars devoted to that population, which deserves better, but not necessaril­y more misinveste­d money.

It is an outrage that anyone in this country and in these times should pay an income tax of 53 per cent; it is the money of the people who earn or otherwise legitimate­ly receive it — that income is their money, not the state’s. Canadians have become so passive and docile, no one seems to utter a peep about government­s taking more than half the income of the wealthier section of the population. Such a condition can only be justified in a state of emergency, and Canada has not had such an emergency since the Second World War. Everyone agrees that government­s provide essential services, and there is general agreement about what most of those services are, but few imagine that they are being provided as efficientl­y and imaginativ­ely as possible.

Canadians are always preoccupie­d with the proximity of the United States, and that country is in shambles because the population has constituti­onally rebelled against 20 years of bipartisan misrule that gave the world the Great Recession, the Iraq War, the migration crises, the appeasemen­t of Iran and North Korea, a flatlined U.S. economy, oceanic emissions of debt, and the enthroneme­nt of witless political correctnes­s that forbade even the utterance of the words “Islamist extremism.” This leaves us under the mistaken belief that Canada has no need to aim for better than its current status quo. It is similar to the reflex to believe that because the least prosperous third of our people receive better health care than their American analogs, we have a worldclass health-care system.

If Canada — which is the least populous and economical­ly smallest of the G7 countries and the only one that is neither the founder nor principal home of a great and ancient civilizati­on based on a distinctiv­e language — wishes to distinguis­h itself from its peers, it will have to do so not only by being peaceable and serene, which it is, but by being an innovative laboratory for good government and imaginativ­e legislatio­n.

The world needs to break the left-right sclerosis: technologi­cal advance creates more unemployme­nt than employment; we are all over-committed to the service economy where there are too many academics, lawyers and consultant­s who add relatively little value to the economy (unlike farmers, factory workers, miners, most doctors, and many teachers and executives). The only visible statesman who utters a word of such things is the new French president, Emmanuel Macron.

To summarize some points I have made here over several years, as food for thought: we should sharply reduce all income taxes on lower personal and corporate taxes, have a personal ceiling of 35 per cent and 20 for companies, but impose a wealth tax on high net worth people of one per cent, which would be paid by operating or supporting approved bona fide plans to employ and train disadvanta­ged people. It would be reduced toward zero as the number of designated poor people was reduced. Taxes on elective (largely luxury) spending and most corporate financial transactio­ns could be raised a few points.

All drugs should be legalized, with compulsory treatment for hard drug addicts (if necessary, in confinemen­t), and the industry’s revenues would accrue to the federal and provincial government­s equally. (The War on Drugs has been the worst defeat the West has endured since the fall of Saigon.)

Private medicine should be accepted, all graduating medical doctors should contribute three months to the public health-care service at modest pay, and there should be user fees and declining benefit scales for people of above-average wealth. Universali­ty is bunk; we must help those who need it.

All but the most egregious or recidivist­ic non-violent lawbreaker­s should be released from confinemen­t and their sentences should be changed to community or private-sector service at Spartan pay and accommodat­ion but relatively full liberty under supervised release. Most of the Harper prisons should become assisted housing.

Aboriginal communitie­s should have to conform to the same standards of administra­tive integrity as others, and all adult aboriginal­s should have the opportunit­y to change their status, with financial assistance, to un-hyphenated citizenshi­p. The federal government should increase immigratio­n by 50 per cent and more actively seek it in Central and Eastern Europe (without rolling back any other region), and should reduce transfer payments to any province that did not decertify teachers’ unions and apply a performanc­e standard to their compensati­on.

Equalizati­on payments, which began as a sop to the federal ego when Duplessis forced the St. Laurent government to acknowledg­e the constituti­onally guaranteed right of provinces to a concurrent jurisdicti­on in direct taxes in 1955, should be reduced by half, over five years. Ottawa should incentiviz­e at least one province to scrap its securities regulation quagmire, replace it with a more explicit and better staffed anti-fraud regime, and welcome practicall­y all capital to this country, as long as at least half of large deposits were retained or invested here for five years. It’s no concern of ours how the money was made, as long as the depositors and investors observe our laws and do not re-enlist the funds for unacceptab­le purposes elsewhere. The oppressive money-laundering rules are just an excuse for government­s to micro-manage our lives. Serious internatio­nal criminals don’t have much difficulty evading them.

Some of these steps would be challenged constituti­onally and would have to be re-legislated until the compositio­n of the higher courts were less infested by judges intoxicate­d by the Charter and who recognize the high court of Parliament.

The Atlantic Provinces should become one, as should the Prairie Provinces, giving the country five provinces of between 2.5 and 14 million people each. The Senate should be composed of exceptiona­lly talented people in all serious fields, appointed for five-year, renewable terms, and should have a limited, but not trivial, right to delay or alter legislatio­n from the House of Commons. The governor-general should become the elected president of the Commonweal­th of Canada, and be co-chief of state with the monarch, and the president and prime minister should have powers roughly equivalent to those of the president and prime minister of France.

It’s a long list, and not all of it would ever be done. But if we started discussing seriously any significan­t part of the above suggestion­s, or something like them, we would engage the attention of the world. If we substantia­lly enacted them, Canada would be widely emulated and would be one of the five most influentia­l countries in the world within 20 years. Why not?

IT IS AN OUTRAGE THAT ANYONE IN THIS COUNTRY AND IN THESE TIMES SHOULD PAY AN INCOME TAX OF 53 PER CENT — CONRAD BLACK

 ??  ??
 ?? SEAN KILPATRICK / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? Columnist Conrad Black has a long list of suggestion­s for possible changes in Canada, including some innovative thoughts related to the Senate.
SEAN KILPATRICK / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES Columnist Conrad Black has a long list of suggestion­s for possible changes in Canada, including some innovative thoughts related to the Senate.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada