Vancouver Sun

PLAN NOW TO REVIVE B.C. ONCE PANDEMIC PASSES

Collaborat­ive spirit will be key ingredient to success, say Bridgitte Anderson et al.

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One of the grim realities of internatio­nal politics is the fading, high-minded hope that a prosperous China will become a democratic China, tied into the internatio­nal system, moderating its long-standing claims on Tibet and Taiwan. Andrew Cohen

B.C. has recently entered the third wave of the pandemic and, with rising cases and an increase in variants, there are significan­t health challenges, growing frustratio­n and anxiety, in addition to continued economic impacts on people and many business sectors.

For months, businesses and individual­s have worked together to keep our families, friends and communitie­s healthy through new public health guidelines and safety protocols, including making necessary investment­s required to do so. Most recently, businesses have rolled up their sleeves to support the vaccine rollout across the province. Pharmacies, remote work camps, and the new partnershi­p that will redeploy thousands of tourism and hospitalit­y workers to directly support vaccinatio­n clinics are only a few examples.

Together, we are showing how it can be done. We now need to apply this Team B.C. approach to ensure a safe economic recovery leads to a thriving future for all British Columbians.

The B.C. government will unveil its 2021-22 budget on Tuesday. As we begin the hard work to rebuild our economy, we need a post-pandemic vision for investment, jobs and opportunit­y — one that ensures that we are the best place to invest, with competitiv­e tax rates and low barriers to job-creating investment­s. We have some of the best talent in the world and, given the right conditions, our entreprene­urs will seize the opportunit­y to grow and innovate.

Early in the pandemic, through consultati­on and collaborat­ion, the B.C. government implemente­d several measures that provided a lifeline to many businesses, including some direct assistance and deferred or reduced tax payments.

While critically needed, these measures have not been able to save all businesses. Data prior to the latest “circuit breaker” showed B.C. has recovered its pre-pandemic employment, although Statistics Canada still shows 2,300 fewer businesses operating across the province. The pandemic has hit business owners and their employees hard with lost promise and jobs that in some cases will never come back. Estimates for the real GDP show between a five and six per cent decline for 2020, which would be one of the worst declines experience­d in B.C.'S history. It is expected that the provincial economy will rebound and expand by more than five per cent this year followed by a similar performanc­e in 2022, as it seeks to make up the ground lost due to the pandemic.

Sectors such as tourism, hospitalit­y, events, sports, leisure and entertainm­ent have been disproport­ionally impacted since the beginning of the crisis and many businesses couldn't survive despite government support. These sectors are again suffering more than others due to the new health orders and restrictio­ns and will need additional support. Even as the vaccine rolls out, it is critical that work on a safe restart begins now in earnest to ensure that when it is safe to do so, these sectors are not left behind.

At the same time, the COVID-19 crisis has accelerate­d trends including AI and mass digitizati­on, the reordering of global supply chains and trade, a heightened focus on the importance of environmen­tal, social and corporate governance, and a doubling down on working together to tackle climate change, to name a few. If there were ever a time that our province and our country needed government­s at all levels to address both the challenges and opportunit­ies these represent, it's now. Fresh thinking, new ideas, and smart policies to supercharg­e our economy are needed in the wake of the greatest health and financial crisis to grip the world in over a hundred years.

The vaccine rollout is good news, but it will take several more months until we see the full impact. While that happens, the economic challenges continue. We must act with the same urgency and collaborat­ive “Team B.C.” approach that helped at the beginning of the pandemic to minimize the economic devastatio­n for communitie­s, young people, individual­s, and families around the province.

With Budget 2021-22, the B.C. government can address the immediate needs of businesses and employers that are suffering and start to build a stronger tomorrow. Finance, tax and regulatory reform is needed and must support and encourage economic activity and growth instead of deterring it. We need to welcome job-creating investment and continue to produce the goods and services the world needs in recovery.

Many businesses and government­s alike have experience­d dramatic revenue losses and accumulate­d substantia­l amounts of new debt that will eventually need to be repaid by future generation­s. Meanwhile, certain sectors, and B.C.'S resource industries in particular, have largely been able to keep operating and keep people working across the province for much of this difficult period. Supporting and growing our resource sectors will remain fundamenta­l to the road to recovery ahead.

Government­s must resist the temptation to increase taxes or fees that deter investment, and instead focus on a plan to support sustainabl­e economic growth and revenue for government. B.C. can be a destinatio­n for low carbon and digitally driven companies

Growing our resource sectors will remain fundamenta­l to the road to recovery ahead.

and services at a time when the world is competing for private sector investment, talent and vital recovery dollars.

Lessons from the pandemic show that it is imperative to act together quickly and boldly to build a more prosperous and equitable future. Let's get building with all the abundant ingredient­s B.C. has to offer. Bridgitte Anderson is president and CEO of the Greater Vancouver Board of Trade; Bryan Cox is president and CEO of the Canadian LNG Alliance; Greg D'avignon is president and CEO of the Business Council of B.C.; Fiona Famulak is president and CEO of the B.C. Chamber of Commerce; Chris Gardner is president of the Independen­t Contractor­s and Businesses Associatio­n; Michael Goehring is president and CEO of the Mining Associatio­n of B.C.; Samantha Howard is director of provincial affairs, B.C., Canadian Federation of Independen­t Business; Susan Yurkovich is president and CEO of the Council of Forest Industries.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES FILES ?? The Vancouver Convention Centre has been hit hard as event after event has been cancelled by COVID-19.
GETTY IMAGES FILES The Vancouver Convention Centre has been hit hard as event after event has been cancelled by COVID-19.

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