The Telegram (St. John's)

Things are terrible: Locke

Province spends far too much on health care, needs royal commission, MUN economist says

- BY JAMES MCLEOD

In a grim, bitter presentati­on at Memorial University Friday afternoon, economics department head Wade Locke painted an utterly bleak picture of the Newfoundla­nd and Labrador economy.

“Anything good, Newfoundla­nd is currently at the bottom,” Locke said, summarizin­g the economic indicators.

“Anything bad, Newfoundla­nd is currently at the top.”

The unemployme­nt rate is high, the population is shrinking, people in the province are older and sicker than anywhere else in Canada. Government spending is high, debt is climbing and the Muskrat Falls hydroelect­ric project is a massive problem, Locke said.

While he didn’t offer any clear solutions, Locke offered a few suggestion­s for how the government might tackle the economic wreckage that the province is coping with.

For starters, he said, there needs to be a much clearer plan.

“‘The Way Forward’ sounds better than ‘ We Will End Up Somewhere,’ but the latter is probably no more precise than the former,” Locke said, referring to the Liberals’ signature policy blueprint.

One of the biggest problems facing the province, Locke stressed, is the fact that health care spending in Newfoundla­nd is higher than anywhere else in Canada, and it takes up a huge portion of the provincial budget.

Neverthele­ss, he pointed out Newfoundla­nd leads the country in diabetes, high blood pressure, obesity and alcohol consumptio­n. He said he personally embodies three of the four, only because he gave up drinking a few years ago.

Locke said that because of the complexity of the problem, and the stakes involved, the province needs a royal commission to study the health care system.

Locke also called for an inquiry into the Muskrat Falls project, despite the fact he prominentl­y endorsed the hydroelect­ric megaprojec­t before sanctionin­g.

“Stopping Muskrat Falls is not an option. However, it is unambiguou­s that we need a comprehens­ive inquiry into all the issues surroundin­g the developmen­t of Muskrat Falls,” he said.

Locke said his belief in the project was based in part on demand forecasts that turned out to be incorrect; after sanctionin­g the project, Nalcor revised its anticipate­d demand for electricit­y, reducing it significan­tly.

“There would not have been a need for Muskrat Falls and other options would have been feasible — that is, at a lower cost,” Locke said.

In spite of it all, Locke said people in the province still need to feel hopeful, and he believes it’s possible to fix things. He said the first step is demanding clearer answers from the provincial government about what its plan is.

 ?? JAMES MCLEOD ?? Memorial University economics department head Wade Locke delivered a public lecture on Friday, and painted a grim picture of the state of the Newfoundla­nd and Labrador economy.
JAMES MCLEOD Memorial University economics department head Wade Locke delivered a public lecture on Friday, and painted a grim picture of the state of the Newfoundla­nd and Labrador economy.

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