National Post (National Edition)

Kenney unveils FDR-inspired tax cuts, $10B in spending

- GEOFFREY MORGAN

CALGARY • Alberta Premier Jason Kenney says he’s recently been reading about former U.S. President Franklin Roosevelt’s stimulus-spending response to the Great Depression of the 1930s.

It’s likely a timely read, as his government faces the most severe contractio­n of economic activity and the sharpest spike in unemployme­nt in more than a generation.

On Monday, Kenney and Finance Minister Travis Toews hoped to channel FDR with a plan to counter the province’s double-digit jobless rate and one of the largest economic contractio­ns among Canadian provinces this year.

The Alberta Recovery Plan features $10 billion in new infrastruc­ture spending and a tax cut to 8 per cent from 10 per cent, that takes effect as early as Wednesday, in a bid to stimulate the province’s economy.

The approach, Kenney said, was inspired in part by FDR’s attempt to stimulate the U.S. economy during the ’30s and also informed by a report written by a panel led by economist Jack Mintz. The panel also included former prime minister Stephen Harper.

“The $10 billion is not necessaril­y the maximum,” Kenney said of the spending package, adding that details of the infrastruc­ture projects will be announced in the coming days.

Monday’s announceme­nt seeks more provincial investment and incentives for industries including petrochemi­cal projects to diversify and support the energy industry, irrigation infrastruc­ture to support the agricultur­e industry and potentiall­y supporting a highspeed railway link between Calgary and Banff being studied by the Canada Infrastruc­ture Bank to boost the tourism industry.

The soon-to-be announced new incentives, new spending and cut provincial corporate taxes is an attempt to drive down the province’s unemployme­nt rate and boost investment after the COVID-19 pandemic and the collapse in oil prices sapped business sentiment.

Every sector in the province took a significan­t hit during the pandemic and oil prices collapsed. Toews said that oil production fell 25 per cent in the second quarter, while the value of non-residentia­l building permits dropped 25 per cent. Meanwhile, retail sales are down 30 per cent and home sales are down 40 per cent since February.

A new Royal Bank of Canada forecast expects Alberta’s economy to shrink by 8.7 per cent this year — the second-worst performing economy in Canada after Newfoundla­nd and Labrador.

“Most dramatical­ly and sadly, more than 330,000 Albertans have lost their jobs. This amounts to the number of jobs Alberta’s economy added over the last decade,” Toews said, adding the official unemployme­nt rate is 15.5 per cent but when the number of people no longer looking for work are counted, the real unemployme­nt rate is closer to 20 per cent.

NDP, the province’s opposition party, called the economic response to the pandemic a “trick” of trickle-down economics, while its leader Rachel Notley called the tax cuts an attempt to “speed up the rate in which he (Kenney) is handing out billions to big corporatio­ns.”

Given the current level of economic uncertaint­y in the province and in the global economy, it will be difficult to measure the effectiven­ess of the tax cuts on job creation, said Trevor Tombe, associate professor of economics at University of Calgary.

“It’s going to be hard to quantify the implicatio­ns of any policy change right now,” Tombe said, adding that the province’s estimate of 55,000 new jobs created by the tax cut over the next four years “is not an implausibl­e estimate.”

A rebound in employment is more dependent on global economic conditions than on the provincial economy, said Joseph Doucet, dean of the Alberta School of Business at the University of Alberta.

“It’s really, really hard to be definitive about numbers because we’re not in a regular or usual environmen­t,” Doucet said, noting that the pandemic had upended economic expectatio­ns.

Alberta would also table an economic outlook later this summer that would provide a “frank” look at the province’s finances following the coronaviru­s-induced shutdown of the economy, Kenney said.

The province had previously planned to reduce corporate taxes from 10 per cent to 8 per cent — a 20 per cent cut — over the next two years, but accelerate­d those changes in an effort to show companies interested in opening offices in Alberta that “the tax gap is real and it’s now,” Kenney said.

Other government­s in Canada and elsewhere had previously promised to cut business tax rates but changed their plans as circumstan­ces changed, Kenney said. As a result, those companies “talked to us and said, ‘come back when you actually get to 8 per cent,’ ” he said.

Business Council of Alberta president and CEO Adam Legge said many companies in the province are poised to lose money this year “and they’re not going to be paying tax anyway.”

“Alberta can be more highly competitiv­e now. It’s more of a long-term piece than helping in a very down year,” Legge said.

 ?? CHRIS SCHWARZ / GOVERNMENT OF ALBERTA ?? Alberta Premier Jason Kenney announced $10 billion
in new infrastruc­ture spending on Monday.
CHRIS SCHWARZ / GOVERNMENT OF ALBERTA Alberta Premier Jason Kenney announced $10 billion in new infrastruc­ture spending on Monday.

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