The Telegram (St. John's)

So much for Ball’s goal of single-digit unemployme­nt

-

Nov. 30, 2017 marked the second anniversar­y of Dwight Ball leading the Liberal party to electoral victory, forming government and becoming premier of Newfoundla­nd and Labrador.

Prior to that election day two years ago, at the last televised leadership debate, Ball made an interestin­g comment to the people of this province. As a refresher: the televised debate, hosted by the CBC at The Rooms and moderated by David Cochrane, began with debate among all three party leaders on the provincial economy.

With a current N.L. unemployme­nt rate of 14.5 per cent (October’s statistic) it will be nothing short of a miracle for Ball to deliver on single-digit unemployme­nt in time for the next election.

Ball, when asked by Cochrane what his goal of an unemployme­nt rate for this province would be at the end of this current term in power, replied single-digit unemployme­nt.

Let’s park that aside for a moment and revisit Telegram reporter James Mcleod’s Oct. 25, 2017 article on the state of this province’s finances. Mcleod was reporting on the latest annual report from auditor general Terry Paddon. The article noted that “employment is forecast to drop by 16,800 people in the next four years.”

With a current N.L. unemployme­nt rate of 14.5 per cent (October’s statistic) it will be nothing short of a miracle for Ball to deliver on single-digit unemployme­nt in time for the next election. (As an aside, Ball, during the election campaign, chided PC Leader Paul Davis, shaking his head in rebuke quoting our then 13.5 per cent unemployme­nt rate.)

Ball campaigned with “A Stronger Tomorrow” slogan. Quoting the Liberal party platform from page three of its 2015 brochure: “The answer to building a stronger, smarter economy is through diversific­ation, job creation and growth.” Since job creation is a very weak supportive pillar in that threeprong­ed approach, the stronger economy and “A Stronger Tomorrow” (shades of Brian Tobin’s “A Better Tomorrow”) is on very weak footing at best.

A 14.5 per cent unemployme­nt rate, a rate 2.3 times the national average, is a galaxy away from Ball’s single-digit unemployme­nt. And at the speed we are travelling, we won’t reach that galaxy in two years.

I should note that on Nov. 7, 2017, I emailed Ball to ask him how we will reach single-digit unemployme­nt in two years.

Nothing but crickets.

Bern Kenny Corner Brook

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada