National Post

Change CERB and consider basic income, senators say

Committee says COVID aid plan has its issues

- Jordan Press

• The federal government’s key emergency benefit for workers with jobs hit by the pandemic is “not a permanent solution” to ongoing hardships, a Senate committee says in a report that makes an argument for a guaranteed minimum income.

The $ 500- a- week Canada Emergency Response Benefit has helped millions of workers who have seen their incomes shrink or dry up entirely due to the pandemic.

While touting it as a “vital lifeline,” the Senate’s national finance committee said Tuesday the CERB misses some who lived in poverty prior to the pandemic, and lacks “sufficient flexibilit­y” for others.

Finding adequate employment will be an ongoing challenge for workers as some industries like tourism and air travel will take longer to come back from COVID- 19 closures, while some jobs may not come back at all in businesses that go bankrupt, the committee said in a new report.

So senators urged the government to work with provinces, territorie­s and Indigenous government­s to “give full, fair and priority considerat­ion” to a basic income, saying that the idea “deserves a more thorough investigat­ion.”

“Why not give it a serious considerat­ion and take a look at what can be done?” said Sen. Tony Loffreda, an Independen­t who sits on the committee. “The next crisis, if we have a guaranteed basic livable income, I think we can save a lot of aid going forward.”

The idea of a basic income means different things to different people, but it is usually viewed as a no- stringsatt­ached payment government­s provide to citizens, replacing multiple programs targeting different needs.

Earlier this month, the parliament­ary budget office estimated a six- month basic income starting in October would cost between $ 47.5 billion and $ 98.1 billion, depending on how much is clawed back from people whose other incomes increase.

“That is the challenge. How do you integrate that into an annual budget and sustain it going forward?” asked Loffreda, an accountant and former bank executive.

“There’s a lot of thought that must go into it and seeing how we can let it work, to make it more sustainabl­e and maybe reduce that gap between the return on capital and the return on labour.”

Federal aid has reached about $ 230 billion, not counting tens of billions more in tax deferrals and government- backed loans, pushing the deficit to $343.2 billion and the national debt past the $ 1- trillion mark by the end of the year.

The fiscal response, the committee said, likely averted “financial devastatio­n for millions of Canadians.”

But now the government must address what the committee said was a “lack of accountabi­lity and transparen­cy” about spending.

Senators called on the government to provide quarterly economic and fiscal updates for the remainder of the crisis, similar to the one Finance Minister Bill Morneau delivered last week.

And senators said it is time for the Liberals to let

Parliament review and approve new measures, rather than rely on sweeping spending and borrowing powers granted as the economic situation rapidly deteriorat­ed in March and April.

The Liberals are expected to make changes soon to the $ 80- billion CERB and an $ 82.3- billion wage subsidy program, hoping to prod more people to move from the former to the latter as part of the reopening process.

Amin Mawani, an associate professor at York University’s Schulich School of Business, said proportion­al subsidies that can wind up or down as circumstan­ces require — such as filling in shortfalls in wages — would be better than an all-or-nothing approach for workers and businesses.

“We have to help businesses get up slowly. They can’t get up fast to 100 per cent capacity,” said Mawani, who has written about possible changes to the CERB and wage subsidy.

He said other ideas for officials to consider are incentives like a signing bonus for CERB recipients who take jobs.

The Senate committee called for a graduated system to benefits: clawing back CERB payments as incomes rise rather than cutting them off abruptly, and offering different levels of benefits for different levels of revenue loss as opposition parties have suggested in the House of Commons.

“Allowing for greater flexibilit­y ... would help more businesses and lets them plan to bring staff back to work in preparatio­n for their busiest season of the year,” NDP finance critic Peter Julian said about the Liberals’ pledge Monday to extend the wage subsidy until December.

He also called for the Liberals to say what they’ll do for people who max out the CERB in the fall without jobs to go back to.

(businesses) can’t get up fast to 100 per cent capacity.

 ?? Sean
Kilpatrick
/ The
CANADIAN PRESS files ?? The Senate’s national finance committee is urging the government to “give full, fair
and priority considerat­ion” to a basic income for Canadians.
Sean Kilpatrick / The CANADIAN PRESS files The Senate’s national finance committee is urging the government to “give full, fair and priority considerat­ion” to a basic income for Canadians.

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