Waterloo Region Record

Time to end regional protection­ism that hurts all Canadians

- DAVID MCKINNON David McKinnon is an analyst at the Frontier Centre for Public Policy. © Troy Media

National debates on the federal equalizati­on program have been marked by conflict, obscure technical jargon, little research on the impact of the program and excessive vitriol. But we get no closer to fixing the problem. It’s time for equalizati­on reform.

Many Canadians have tuned out. They can’t deal with discussion­s that have become inaccessib­le to them.

That’s tragic because the program negatively affects the lives of all Canadians. And equalizati­on arrangemen­ts have also been incorporat­ed into other federal programs that also negatively impact Canadians.

And we can’t forget the federal government’s failure to measure comparabil­ity of provincial programmin­g across Canada, the principal stated goal of the program.

Canadians are poorer because of equalizati­on in several ways.

In Atlantic Canada, equalizati­on has enabled excessive expenditur­es on each province’s public sector that should make political leaders in those provinces blush.

In turn, these excessive public sectors have led to high tax regimes, which means less money in people’s pockets.

They’ve also produced local economies that are no longer competitiv­e. The four Atlantic provinces are at the bottom of the list of all Canadian provinces and American states in terms of growth.

Ontarians are poorer because they’ve spent several hundred billion dollars over the years to support equalizati­on and similar arrangemen­ts in other programs.

Yet the people of Ontario are poorer because they have less access to doctors, nurses, hospital beds, nursing homes, community colleges and universiti­es than other Canadians.

Expenditur­es on equalizati­on and related programs have corroded Ontario’s foundation­s to the point that the province can’t provide the services that people need at levels provided elsewhere — services provided by the funds that Ontario citizens disproport­ionately provide.

Albertans are also poorer because provincial taxpayers have been required to provide, for many years, more than $20 billion annually to support programmin­g elsewhere. This is a remarkable burden for a population of 4.3 million people. They are also poorer because equalizati­on is not designed to assist when there are drastic changes in provincial circumstan­ces.

Quebecers have been able to avoid some of the worst effects of federal regional subsidies because these aren’t as large, relative to the economy as a whole, as they are in Atlantic Canada and Manitoba.

However, 50 years of massive subsidies from other Canadians have not helped Quebec compete more effectivel­y. The province is near the bottom of North American jurisdicti­ons in economic growth, and its productivi­ty is below the Canadian average.

Equalizati­on and related programs are also profoundly unfair, first of all because they’re capricious.

The federal government has never studied the economic impact of equalizati­on in different provinces. It has never measured the program against its stated goal. And it has never tabulated, in any public document, the full range of regional subsidies it provides.

Equalizati­on and related arrangemen­ts in other programs are unfair because the federal government has made offensive distinctio­ns among similarly situated citizens while administer­ing those programs. For example, a program provides Employment Insurance for self-employed fishers but similar support isn’t available for any other group of self-employed people.

The Constituti­on permits almost complete flexibilit­y to change equalizati­on and related programmin­g. All that’s guaranteed in the Constituti­on is commitment to the principle of equalizati­on, not any funding mechanism nor level of payments. There’s ample scope for reform.

Canada needs to modernize programs such as equalizati­on that damage national competitiv­eness.

The federal government needs to embark now on a proper and thoughtful process of equalizati­on renewal, beginning with legislativ­e hearings.

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