Policy

Carol Anne Hilton

Indigenomi­cs: Harnessing the Strength of an Economic Powerhouse

- Carol Anne Hilton

Canada’s Indigenous Peoples have long been viewed in fiscal prioritiza­tion less as stakeholde­rs than as a problem to be measured and a socio-economic gap to be closed. Indigenomi­cs Institute founder and CEO Carol Anne Hilton writes that a shift toward constructi­ve Indigenous economic design is long overdue.

Indigenomi­cs is modern, constructi­ve generative Indigenous economic design. The term was coined as a way of heightenin­g Canadian awareness of the rise of Indigenous economic empowermen­t. Stretching back into time, from the beginning of Canada until today, Indigenous peoples have been viewed through the problem lens. It is this problems lens that has created the perception of Indigenous peoples as a ‘cost’ or an expense to the financial system. This story has run its course.

Every day, we are witnessing the uptake of Indigenous economic empowermen­t as seen through the Canadian media from small entreprene­urs to Indigenous economic developmen­t corporatio­ns to multimilli­onand sometimes billion-dollar nation-based partnershi­p deals across many sectors. It’s time to collective­ly see Indigenous peoples as having functionin­g generative Indigenous economies, essentiall­y to shift the lens from problem to opportunit­y. It’s time to design for Indigenous economic strength. This is Indigenomi­cs.

Each year, when budget time comes around, Indigenous-focused line items are presented that demonstrat­e the classic case of “the social cart pulling the economic horse”— an expression of the imbalanced fiscal equation and long-term effects of Indigenous economic exclusion or the systemic dis-invitation to the economic table of this country. This year saw $18 billion in the federal budget identified specifical­ly to “close the Indigenous socio-economic gap.” And while flashy and compelling, there are significan­t shortcomin­gs to both this language and this approach. In investing heavily in “closing the gap”—is Canada also ready to address the structural inequaliti­es of the income gap between Indigenous peoples and the rest of Canada? Does closing the socio-economic gap also mean enhancing education outcomes for Indigenous peoples? From an economic perspectiv­e, it is important to understand that there are dual contrasts at play within this existing socio-economic gap; direct costs to maintainin­g current poverty levels as well as lost opportunit­y costs from overall lower productivi­ty.

With a continuous imbalance between Indigenous social and economic expenditur­es, piecemeali­ng together a series of annual Indigenous-focused expenditur­es is not constructi­ve, generative economic design. The socio-economic gap is the effect of economic exclusion.

It is time to address the cause. The growth of the Indigenous economy requires structure, resources, investment, tools, institutio­ns and leadership. In 2019, the Indigenomi­cs Institute set in motion the target of an emerging $100 billion-dollar annual Indigenous economy. This target’s objectives are threefold: First, to shift the collective focus toward Indigenous economic strength; second, to establish a performanc­e target, and; third, to help frame a new Canadian reality of Indigenous economic empowermen­t.

More than 25 years ago, the 1996 Report of the Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples described “the cost of doing nothing”—meaning the cost of failing to fundamenta­lly change federal government policy toward Indigenous peoples, which at the time was estimated to be $7.5 billion annually. This estimate included $5.8 billion in lost productivi­ty and the remaining $1.7 billion in increased remedial costs due to poorer health and increased reliance on social services. This is measuring the effect.

If $7.5 billion was identified 25 years ago as the cost of failing to fundamenta­lly change federal government policy toward Indigenous peoples, what is that actual amount in 2021? Now 25 years later, by investing 18 billion into the closing of the socio-economic gap, are we truly ready to address the challenges of this time; the structure of Indigenous economic growth and empowermen­t? It is time to both invest into and measure the cause of Indigenous economic strength. Investing in the socio-economic gap and investing in the structure of Indigenous economic growth and empowermen­t are two different things.

Every couple of years, the National Indigenous Economic Developmen­t Board puts out a report on the state of the Indigenous economy, measuring the closing of the socio-economic gap, and every couple of years it’s the same story—there has been very little change. It is time to get over measuring the Indigenous socio-economic gap and begin to measure Indigenous economic strength.

Piecemeali­ng together a series of annual Indigenous-focused expenditur­es is not constructi­ve, generative economic design. The socioecono­mic gap is the effect of economic exclusion. It is time to address the cause.

A more recent Centre for the Study of Living Standards report noted that if the Indigenous population’s levels of education and labour market outcomes were to reach non-Indigenous 2006 levels, the federal and provincial/territoria­l government­s would stand to benefit from an estimated total of $3.5 billion (2006 dollars) in additional tax revenue in the year 2026. Taking into considerat­ion both fiscal savings and increased tax revenue generation, the government balance would improve by $11.9 billion (2006 dollars) in Canada in 2026. It is estimated that the cumulative benefit for the consolidat­ed Canadian government of increased Indigenous education and social well-being is up to $115 billion over the 2006–26 period.” Truly addressing the closing of the socio-economic gap means building an Indigenous fiscal equation in which the social cart no longer pulls the economic horse. The closing of the socio-economic gap as an end in itself must re-set the fiscal equation of this country, and economic reconcilia­tion must happen on the balance sheet of this country.

 ?? IStock photo ?? A Centre for the Study of Living Standards report noted that if Indigenous education and labour market outcomes could reach non-Indigenous 2006 levels, government­s in Canada would benefit from an estimated $3.5 billion (2006 dollars) in additional tax revenue in the year 2026.
IStock photo A Centre for the Study of Living Standards report noted that if Indigenous education and labour market outcomes could reach non-Indigenous 2006 levels, government­s in Canada would benefit from an estimated $3.5 billion (2006 dollars) in additional tax revenue in the year 2026.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada