Windsor Star

BUDGET MAY GIVE ECONOMY OVERDUE POSITIVE SHOCK

- KEVIN CARMICHAEL

Chrystia Freeland, the primary guardian of Canada's finances, is betting that the best defence against a post-pandemic debt spiral is a good offence.

For a generation, starting with Paul Martin in the mid-1990s, the federal finance minister has been mythologiz­ed as the one member of cabinet with the courage to say “no” to spending sprees. Freeland's first budget since her appointmen­t as finance minister eight months ago will force a new narrative, one more relevant for the times in which we live.

The age of austerity is truly over. Confronted with a historic deficit, Freeland decided to spend more, not less, gambling that a series of multi-billion investment­s in childcare, green energy, and the knowledge economy will generate a return on investment that will allow Canada to grow out of its current problems.

So instead of $105 billion, which would have been a narrower deficit than expected last autumn, the Finance Department now predicts a shortfall of about $155 billion in the fiscal year that began this month.

But over time, the combinatio­n of stronger growth and relatively low interest rates will allow the federal government to get its finances under control, at least according to the budget, written with the help of Michael Sabia, the former head of pension fund Caisse de dépôt et placement du Québec and now deputy minister of finance.

The budget predicts that new short-term recovery measures, including a subsidy aimed at encouragin­g smaller companies to hire new workers, will help avoid the disappoint­ing growth that followed the Great Recession. Freeland sees a deficit of about one per cent of GDP by 2026, and debt of about 50 per cent of the economy.

Both figures are reasonable, especially under the circumstan­ces. Significan­tly, the Trudeau government thinks it will get there without significan­t tax increases.

The path that the Liberals have chosen is littered with traps, but Freeland's pivot from the era of prudence should work, at least in theory.

Former Bank of Canada governor Stephen Poloz is among the leading economists who say deficits can be managed as long as the rate of economic growth exceeds the interest rate government­s pay to borrow.

Since leaving the central bank, Poloz has been urging politician­s to instead worry about Canada's ability to generate inflation-free growth, which dropped to an abysmal rate of about 1.2 per cent during the pandemic, according to the central bank's most recent estimate.

Poloz said if it were up to him, he'd boost Canada's economic potential by erasing all barriers to trade between the provinces; use the tax code to encourage companies to invest; and spend heavily on productivi­ty-enhancing infrastruc­ture, especially childcare.

Freeland's budget checks those boxes, although the $21 million she set aside to support efforts to boost interprovi­ncial trade looks perfunctor­y.

The government's commitment­s to the other items on Poloz's list are more noteworthy.

The most important measure in the budget is a promise to use the federal spending power to bring about $10-a-day childcare across the country, a potential game-changer that — based on Quebec's experience — will significan­tly boost the participat­ion of women in the economy.

The government is prepared to commit more than $8 billion per year, an investment that

Our blind faith in laissez-faire economics and smaller government resulted in a depleted manufactur­ing base that had no ability to produce vaccines.

it estimates would more than pay for itself by adding 240,000 workers to the labour force and raising GDP by as much as 1.2 per cent. It would be a positive shock to growth.

At the same time, the budget would commit tens of billions of dollars to infrastruc­ture such as public transit and ports, tax measures aimed at encouragin­g companies to invest in technology and research, and funds that would be used to back companies with high-growth potential.

Together they could jolt Canada's woeful productivi­ty rate.

The Trudeau government proposes setting aside hundreds of millions of dollars for four specific fields where it thinks Canada has a chance to excel: artificial intelligen­ce, quantum computing, photonics and genomics.

It would seed a “net-zero accelerato­r” with $8 billion to back clean-energy companies, and it would boost the Strategic Innovation Fund.

Our blind faith in laissez-faire economics and smaller government resulted in a depleted manufactur­ing base that had no ability to produce vaccines.

Our assumption that lower corporate taxes would lead to investment in cutting-edge research technology was misguided.

Canada's economy was overdue for a positive shock.

A historic budget might do the trick.

 ?? JUSTIN TANG/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland propose a tax on vacant or underused housing owned by non-residents.
JUSTIN TANG/THE CANADIAN PRESS Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland propose a tax on vacant or underused housing owned by non-residents.

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