Saskatoon StarPhoenix

Much is at stake in fight against austerity budget

The Treaty 6 Justice Collective says we need a common front to push back.

-

There are moments in history when local politics have national, and even internatio­nal, significan­ce. Saskatchew­an is currently living one of those moments.

Have no illusions. The recent provincial budget is about more than reducing government expenditur­es. It is an act of class warfare, and the beginning of a process of redefining the society you live in — massively reducing the social role of the state, and transferri­ng yet more wealth to the already wealthy. There are three budgets left in the Saskatchew­an Party’s current mandate, and they will be worse than the one just announced. They will be about “permanent austerity,” not shortterm belt-tightening.

We’re being sold a lie. As Nobel laureate economist Paul Krugman has noted, “All of the economic research that allegedly supported the austerity push has been discredite­d. On the other side of the ledger, the benefits of improved confidence failed to make their promised appearance. Since the global turn to austerity in 2010, every country that introduced significan­t austerity has seen its economy suffer, with the depth of the suffering closely related to the harshness of the austerity.”

There is a mountain of evidence which demonstrat­es that taking the knife to education and social programs costs society more over the long term, while dramatical­ly increasing social suffering in the short term.

In Ontario in 1997, one employed person in 40 worked for the minimum wage — but by 2015 it reached one in eight. In B.C., poverty among seniors rose from a low of 2.2 per cent in 1996 to 12.7 per cent in 2014 — and many seniors have incomes just above the poverty line. Single women face a particular­ly high risk of economic insecurity in old age — onethird of single senior women in B.C. live below the poverty line. This level of immiserati­on and social abandonmen­t is shameful in a country as wealthy as Canada.

Austerity is not an inevitabil­ity. This is no time for despair. You have an opportunit­y to create a movement of resistance that can turn the tables. That movement must be as historic and transforma­tive as the Sask. Party’s master plan is.

Moralistic appeals to those in power will not get our movement very far. We must build a common front that doesn’t leave anyone behind. This means putting the needs of people on social assistance, the unemployed, low-income, and disabled, and, crucially, First Nations and indigenous people, at the core of our fight.

We need to build a movement of resistance that allows people to shake off their fatalism and their indifferen­ce. This means proving that we can make small victories that tangibly improve people’s lives, and thus offer hope and instil the belief that rising up can make a difference.

If the Sask. Party is successful in implementi­ng its permanent austerity agenda, the implicatio­ns will be national — and even internatio­nal.

The Wall government will have succeeded in creating a meaner and much more unequal society. But if we fight back and win, the implicatio­ns will be even greater. The Treaty 6 Justice Collective are operators of The Stand community organizing centre.

Since the global turn to austerity in 2010, every country that introduced significan­t austerity has seen its economy suffer, with the depth of the suffering closely related to the harshness of the austerity.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada