Trudeau Is Going To Bury Us In Debt

bob the dog

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Aug 14, 2020
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Old news from 2017. Expect it is more today.

Every Canadian member of Parliament and senator started getting bigger paycheques just days after the Liberal government released a budget projecting years of deficits and offering no plan to eventually balance the books.


While salary increases for parliamentarians are determined by a federal law, a secretive multi-party committee of MPs that oversees the House of Commons administration can decline a pay raise, and move to freeze their salaries through legislation.

With the Board of Internal Economy’s approval though, MPs will take home a base salary of $172,700 this year, up from $170,400 last year.
 

Twin_Moose

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Apr 17, 2017
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Pretty damning article about the state of the Canadian economy today and in the future of a Lib. Gov.

For years Canadian oil kept the economy afloat. Now that's changing — with major consequences

A new geopolitical order is taking shape. The globe is rapidly realigning under American and Chinese spheres of influence and the pandemic has only raised the stakes. How can Canada finally get serious about its internal stability and external security so it can effectively play a role as a middle power? Today, Jesse Snyder examines the worrying trend in our exports.

Back in summer 2006, former prime minister Stephen Harper laid out his ambitions to dramatically expand Canadian oil exports.

Economic growth in China and Africa would propel the oil sands to new heights, Harper told a business crowd in London, England, and set the stage for a mega-sized Canadian industry that would rival the “building of the Pyramids or China’s Great Wall.”

In the following years, tens of billions in foreign capital flowed into northern Alberta as the global economy ran red hot, creating a prolonged period of export growth in the region. But the Harper vision was never fully realized. Today, years after a collapse in oil markets in mid-2014, investment in the fossil fuel sector has slumped. Legal and regulatory hurdles have continued to choke off major pipeline projects, scaring off would-be investors.

The slump has exposed Canada’s decades-long dependence on oil exports. Over the past 11 years, Canada has run repeated annual current account deficits, with an average yearly shortfall of between $50-$60 billion (the current account represents a country’s net economic transactions with the rest of the world). The reason, in simple terms, was a gradual decline in oil and gas investments with no clear replacement to make up the difference.

“We were no longer building our future at home, but rather collecting rents in the present on investments from the past, like coupon clippers living off past prosperity,” David Dodge, former governor of the Bank of Canada, wrote in a report for the Public Policy Forum in September.

Dodge, among other observers, says the prolonged current account deficit serves as a useful — if worrying — barometer of the Canadian economy, one that should serve as a warning signal for a federal government focused almost exclusively on redistribution rather than economic growth. Many say it’s time for Canada to get serious about a question that has stumped policymakers for years: how can we materially grow Canada’s exports to ensure a healthy future economy?

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While Ottawa’s emergency funding measures aimed at battling COVID-19 only magnifies this account balance, Dodge says it is part of a much broader trend that stretches back years.

“We were already on a slippery slope coming into COVID,” he said in a recent interview with National Post.

Ahead of the 2008 financial crisis, Canada’s exports exceeded imports by a “healthy” margin of three to five per cent, Dodge said in the PPF report. That has since been flipped over for an annual average deficit of negative two to three per cent.

And while annual current account deficits don’t spell trouble for a country, a chronic shortfall can spell trouble as governments continue to draw from the public purse to pay for costly social programs like childcare, expanded unemployment insurance, and healthcare for a rapidly aging population.

“This is not a very sustainable situation,” Dodge said. “You can sustain it for a while, but we know that over time the situation deteriorates as service costs on foreign debts build over time.”

The problem isn’t specific to making up for natural resources outputs, which still contributed a staggering $76.6 billion to the current account in 2019 — about 80 per cent of which came from crude oil and bitumen production. Exports in the automotive and aerospace sectors have continued to decline over the years, while consumption for autos or travel services have increased.

From the beginning of the financial recession until the end of 2019, Canadian investments in assets abroad outweighed foreign direct investments by $804 billion, Dodge said in the report.

Observers are divided over how to address the continued shortfall. Many say the next generation of export-based industries will be in leading-edge products like artificial intelligence, financial tech or electric vehicles, to name a few.

Jim Balsillie, former Blackberry head and chair of the Council of Canadian Innovators, has for years been calling on Ottawa to tighten up rules around intellectual property, which would give home-grown Canadian companies an opportunity to scale up and sell their products to the world. There are particular worries that, in a digital economy increasingly dominated by U.S. heavyweights like Google and Amazon, Canada will increasingly become a “satellite” economy developing IP for foreign firms, and gleaning little of the benefits in return.

Instead, Canada’s trade diversification efforts have largely focused on signing new trade deals with partners — an approach that was necessary in the past, but has now run its course, according to many trade experts.

“The truth is, we’re basically done negotiating trade deals at this point,” said Sean Speer, former Conservative advisor and professor at the Munk School of Global Affairs and Public policy.

Canada has now signed more than 50 trade deals with foreign governments, with varying degrees of success. But observers like Speer say the shortcoming is often in the lack of follow-through. Canadian policymakers often sign trade agreements, partake in photo-ops, and then leave business owners to seek out new opportunities by their lonesome.

“It’s one thing to sign a deal, it’s another thing to take advantage of the new market access that’s been achieved,” Speer said.

Even some recent trade agreements with allies have only created new rifts. In a September letter to four Cabinet ministers, for example, the Canadian Agri-Food Trade Alliance (CAFTA) lamented that Canada’s recent trade deal with Europe “has failed to deliver on its promises for Canada’s agrifood exporters,” and has instead led to an “overall deterioration” in Canada’s trade balance with its European partners.

Nowhere are trade anxieties more prevalent than with the U.S., which still accounts for the vast majority of Canadian exports. A bellicose and protectionist Trump administration has revived long-held worries about Canadian over-dependence on America, prompting a shift in thinking among business leaders.

“The good old days are over,” said Goldy Hyder, head of the Ottawa-based Business Council of Canada, which represents a number of Canada’s largest corporations. “We became a complacent and comfortable country, just relying on the ease of doing business in the United States.”

Hyder is calling for a range of supports for industry to help them expand into new markets. They include more guidance for private firms in navigating foreign markets, and ensuring critical infrastructure like seaports and oil pipelines are built.

Hyder and others are quick to acknowledge that it will be a steep hill to climb, as Canada has for years sought to diversify away from the U.S. market only to deepen its dependency on the world’s largest economy.

It was more than 50 years ago that prime minister Pierre Trudeau told a room full of U.S. Congressmen that sharing a border with the United States was like “sleeping next to an elephant,” in which the smaller country is “affected by every twitch and grunt.”

At the time, relations with the U.S. had soured badly with the election of Richard Nixon, prompting Ottawa to explore new options for trade. That eventually led to the Third Option report in 1972, a trade diversification plan that is widely seen as a flop decades later.

Today, Canada is again in a position where it will need to expand its trade base to reassert itself on the world stage, or threaten to slip into a long and slow decline.

It’s a point that Dodge, the former BoC governor, is trying to highlight as Ottawa assumes increasing levels of foreign-funded debts while seemingly putting little emphasis on economic expansion.

“In the end, we as Canadians cannot consume what we do not produce.”
 

Dixie Cup

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Sep 16, 2006
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That's normal.
There is low growth everywhere.
Under Harper, we actually suffered a recession in 2015 because of low spending and tax cuts.
Thankfully we are getting necessary investments now.


Apparently, you don't realize that when taxes are lowered, government income increases because more people have discretionary spending thus more tax is actually paid. That's a proven btw.
 

Hoid

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Oct 15, 2017
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Old news from 2017. Expect it is more today.

Every Canadian member of Parliament and senator started getting bigger paycheques just days after the Liberal government released a budget projecting years of deficits and offering no plan to eventually balance the books.


While salary increases for parliamentarians are determined by a federal law, a secretive multi-party committee of MPs that oversees the House of Commons administration can decline a pay raise, and move to freeze their salaries through legislation.

With the Board of Internal Economy’s approval though, MPs will take home a base salary of $172,700 this year, up from $170,400 last year.
Seems like reasonable raise.

Not quite sure why opposition MPs get paid that much. They do nothing.
 

bob the dog

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Apparently, you don't realize that when taxes are lowered, government income increases because more people have discretionary spending thus more tax is actually paid. That's a proven btw.

Recognizing the effect of the chartered banks extracting $50 billion in profits annually from the economy while leaving no tangible asset behind would be a good first step to acknowledging a problem with the economy imo. Air is Canada's #1 industry, just like the emperors new robe. And we are all so proud of our banks.

Canada has signed 50 trade agreements and yet one country has a distinct advantage over all others at accessing Canadian financial holdings. The more you learn the less you want to know.

I don't see how someone with a base salary of $175,000 before perks can realistically decide or represent what is best for someone living on the CPP / OAP combination of $20,000. Never has there been a better example of hogs to a trough.
 

Hoid

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Oct 15, 2017
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Recognizing the effect of the chartered banks extracting $50 billion in profits annually from the economy while leaving no tangible asset behind would be a good first step to acknowledging a problem with the economy imo. Air is Canada's #1 industry, just like the emperors new robe. And we are all so proud of our banks.

Canada has signed 50 trade agreements and yet one country has a distinct advantage over all others at accessing Canadian financial holdings. The more you learn the less you want to know.

I don't see how someone with a base salary of $175,000 before perks can realistically decide or represent what is best for someone living on the CPP / OAP combination of $20,000. Never has there been a better example of hogs to a trough.
Rex Tillerson makes about $250,000 US a day in pension from Exxon.

Isn't that a better example?
 

bob the dog

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Rex Tillerson makes about $250,000 US a day in pension from Exxon.
Isn't that a better example?

Major benefactor turns out to be the bank that holds the funds and parlays that into $1,000,000 a day or more. An argument could be made about Exxon being a private corporation but oil companies are like banks in making their own rules.

What does a person do with that much money and why do we think riches are so important. The government weasels firmly placing itself in the top 1% is ridiculous childish arrogance. Today's word is narcissistic. The only reason money is important is to keep others off your back.
 

Hoid

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Oct 15, 2017
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Major benefactor turns out to be the bank that holds the funds and parlays that into $1,000,000 a day or more. An argument could be made about Exxon being a private corporation but oil companies are like banks in making their own rules.

What does a person do with that much money and why do we think riches are so important. The government weasels firmly placing itself in the top 1% is ridiculous childish arrogance. Today's word is narcissistic. The only reason money is important is to keep others off your back.
wow. They parlay $250,000 a day into a million a day?

That is some kind of magic there.

In 2018 you had to earn about $737,000 a year to be considered in the top 1%

I'm sure its closer to a million now.

That's what makes your anger towards government so hilarious.

They are nowhere near the top 1%
 

JLM

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Has anyone come to understand that the solution to this problem has to be started right at the source. HTF can anyone who has never had to worry about looking after money be expected to start at mid life? When the only obstacle to a problem is money which he is in easy reach of, every problem will be solved until the money runs out. That has already happened. He's redundant!
 

Hoid

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Oct 15, 2017
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We're on page 19 of this thread and still not a mention of exactly what spending should have been prevented.

It's easy to say there's too much spending but it's hard to say which spending should have been prevented.

By preventing an economic disaster the federal government has reduced the amount of damage done to Canadians and Canadian companies.

That's a good thing.
 

bob the dog

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We're on page 19 of this thread and still not a mention of exactly what spending should have been prevented.
It's easy to say there's too much spending but it's hard to say which spending should have been prevented.
By preventing an economic disaster the federal government has reduced the amount of damage done to Canadians and Canadian companies.
That's a good thing.

Ideally the role of government should be as a regulator. They are in over their heads when it comes to driving the economy and not for the lack of planning but execution time and again.

Not enough real world experience in the jobs they are asked to do. Sign a trade deal but neglecting to establish trade is a waste of time imo. My MP is 22 years old. Shadow cabinet already. His friends work at Canadian Tire. My expectations are low.

You could leave a dozen shovels beside the entrance to any government office and see how long before one gets picked up never mind used. That would be someone else's job. They don't know who. Shovels would be there for a month before someone made someone else take them away. That's why it is so good to buy government equipment. #1 it is the best money can buy. #2 under used

It is what it is. A pathetic money sucking charade.
 

Hoid

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But what programs would you cut the funding for?

Who does without?

Certainly not the oil industry!