Calgary Herald

Productivi­ty, spending threaten Alberta Advantage

- LIVIO DI MATTEO AND JASON CLEMENS

Alberta’s decades-long economic success is a result of resource wealth, relatively sound public policies and a growing skilled labour force.

Compared to other energyprod­ucing jurisdicti­ons, such as Alaska, North Dakota, Saskatchew­an, Texas and Wyoming, Alberta does well economical­ly, but there are areas of concern, which, if ignored, may affect the province’s long-term prosperity.

Among comparativ­e jurisdicti­ons over a 10-year period, Alberta enjoyed the second highest average rate of real economic growth and the second highest level of real per capita GDP. But its growth in real per capita GDP ranked second last. Increasing­ly, Alberta suffers from weak productivi­ty, with low growth in real output per worker.

Alberta’s strong performanc­e is increasing­ly due to extensive rather than intensive economic growth — that is, from growth of inputs rather than improvemen­ts in productivi­ty. Over the period 2001 to 2012, Alberta ranked last with respect to its average growth rate in real output per worker GDP across these 10 jurisdicti­ons.

Alberta’s fiscal performanc­e is weaker than other energyprod­ucing jurisdicti­ons despite a strong economy.

Several U.S. states are enjoying consecutiv­e large surpluses, while Alberta only just reported an operating surplus and continues to accumulate long-term debt associated with capital spending.

Also, Alberta’s net debt posi- tion has quietly eroded from a net asset position of $31.5 billion in 2007-08 to a net asset position of $12.1 billion in 2012-13. As the Fraser Institute’s Mark Milke has noted, had the government of Alberta simply maintained the real value of per person spending in the province since 2005, Alberta would have recorded balanced budgets.

Alberta’s challenges are amplified by a disproport­ionate reliance on volatile natural resource revenues compared to comparable jurisdicti­ons. Without resource revenues, Alberta moves from the fourth highest average surplus (per capita) over the 2000 to 2011 period ($763), to the second largest average per capita deficit ($1,626).

The province has also done a relatively poor job stewarding its natural resource bounty in the form of a sovereign wealth fund. Among the seven North American jurisdicti­ons that have such a fund, Alberta’s Heritage Fund is ranked third behind Alaska and New Mexico, and fourth in terms of the per capita value of the fund.

As well, Alberta’s per capita value of the fund was one-20th the value of Alaska’s, one-third the value of Wyoming’s, and less than half the value of New Mexico’s. Alberta’s fund has also grown the slowest of the funds in existence between 2000-01 and 2012-13.

Finally, Alberta can improve its tax mix by shifting away from income taxes and toward a consumptio­n tax.

Three of the jurisdicti­ons included in our analysis have no income taxes (Alaska, Texas and Wyoming). Moreover, Wyoming and Texas also impose no corporate income tax.

In addition, Alberta’s tax rates vis-a-vis the U.S. states with personal and/or corporate income taxes tend to be higher. By reforming the tax system to rely more on consumptio­n taxation, Alberta would bring its mix of taxes in line with competing energy producing provinces and states and improve the efficiency of its tax system.

Despite its impressive economic performanc­e, Alberta cannot rest on its laurels and must ensure its future competitiv­e edge by boosting economic productivi­ty, restoring long-term fiscal balance, reducing reliance on volatile resource rents, building up the value of its Heritage Fund, and reforming its tax system by bringing in a provincial consumptio­n tax. Not doing so will in the long run relegate the Alberta Advantage to merely a footnote in Canadian economic history.

LIVIO DI MATTEO IS AN ECONOMICS PROFESSOR AT LAKEHEAD UNIVERSITY AND A FRASER INSTITUTE SENIOR FELLOW. JASON CLEMENS IS THE FRASER INSTITUTE’S EXECUTIVE VICE-PRESIDENT. THEY ARE AUTHORS OF AN ECONOMIC AND FISCAL COMPARISON OF ALBERTA AND OTHER NORTH AMERICAN ENERGY PRODUCING PROVINCES AND STATES, WHICH WAS RELEASED TODAY.

 ??  ?? Livio Di Matteo
Livio Di Matteo
 ??  ?? Jason Clemens
Jason Clemens

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