This note is a guest contribution by Paul Kedrosky, author of the Infectious Greed Blog.
From my friend Jason Clemens at the Pacific Research Institute, how Canada (sic.) is newly the land of smaller government. I donât agree completely, as Canada has been the beneficiary of a massive, unpriced subsidy â proximity, physical and economic, to the U.S. and its debt-happy consumers â but makes some useful and intriguing points.
Canada, Land of Smaller Government
When Americans look to Canada, they generally think of an ally, though one dominated by socialist economic policies. But the Canada of the 1970s and early 1980sâthe era of left-wing Prime Minister Pierre Trudeauâno longer exists. America's northern neighbor has transformed itself economically over the last 20 years.The Canadian reforms began in 1988 with a U.S. free trade pact that would lead to the North American Free Trade Agreement. But change really began to take off in 1993. A socialist-leaning government in Saskatchewan started by reducing spending and moving towards a balanced budget. This was followed by historic reforms by the Conservatives in Alberta, who relied on spending reductions to balance their budget quickly.
In 1995, the federal government, led by the Liberal Party, passed the most important budget in three generations. Federal spending was reduced almost 10% over two years and federal employment was slashed 14%. By 1998, the federal government was in surplus and reducing the nearly $650 billion national debt. Provincial governments similarly focused on eliminating deficits by paring spending and reducing debt, and then they started to offer tax relief.
All government spending peaked at 53% of Canadian GDP in 1992 and fell steadily to just under 40% by 2008. (Government spending in the U.S. was 38.8% of GDP that year.) The recession has caused government spending to increase in both countries. But if present trends continue, within two or three years Canada will have a smaller government as a share of its economy than the U.S.
Canadian taxes have also come down at the federal and provincial level. They were reduced with the stated goal of improving incentives for work effort, savings, investment and entrepreneurship.
Jean ChrĂŠtien (a Liberal) won elections in 1993, 1997 and 2000 by promising to balance the books, to prioritize federal spending to ensure that government was doing what was needed, and also to deliver tax relief. Mr. ChrĂŠtien's former finance minister, Paul Martin, became prime minister in 2003, but he lost power to the Conservative Party in 2006, in part because he moved away from some of the ChrĂŠtien principles.
Tellingly, the last three Canadian elections have all had key debates on tax reliefânot whether there should be tax cuts but rather what type of tax cuts. Beginning in 2001 under a Liberal government, even the politically sensitive federal corporate income tax rate has been reduced. It is now 18%, down from 28%, and the plan is to reduce it to 15% in 2012. The U.S. federal rate is 35%.
Yet much of the tax relief since 2000 has been on personal income taxes. The bottom two personal income tax rates have been reduced, and the income thresholds for all four rates have been increased and indexed to inflation. Canada has also reduced capital gains taxes twice (the rate is now 14.5%), cut the national sales tax to 5% from 7%, increased contribution limits to the Canadian equivalent of 401(k)s, and created new accounts similar to Roth IRAs.
Government austerity has been accompanied by prosperity. According to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), between 1997 and 2007 Canada's economic performance outstripped the OECD average and led the G-7 countries. Growth in total employment in Canada averaged 2.1%, compared to an OECD average of 1.1%.
During the mid-1990s, Canada's commitment to reform allowed it to tackle two formerly untouchable programs: welfare and the Canada Pension Plan (CPP), equivalent to Social Security in the U.S. Over three years, federal and provincial governments agreed to changes that included investing surplus contributions in market instruments such as stocks amd bonds, curtailing some benefits, and increasing the contribution rate. The CPP is financially solvent and will be able to weather the retiring baby boomers.
The one area Canada has been slow to reform is health care, which continues to be dominated by government. However, some provinces have allowed a series of small experiments: a completely private emergency hospital in Montreal and several private clinics in Vancouver. British Columbia and Alberta also are experimenting with market-based payments to hospitals. While these are incremental steps, the path in Canada is fairly clear: More markets and choice will exist in the future. The trend in the U.S. is the opposite.
Most strikingly, Canada is emerging more quickly from the recession than almost any industrialized country. It's unemployment rate, which peaked at 9% in August 2009, has already fallen to 7.9%. Americans can learn much by looking north.
Mr. Clemens is the director of research at the Pacific Research Institute and a co-author of "The Canadian Century: Moving Out of America's Shadow" (Key Porter Books, 2010).
Copyright (c) Paul Kedrosky, Infectious Greed
A couple of points missed here.
A new tax called HST in B.C and Ontario
combined it is 12% & 13%. This is on everything bought like gas!
Canadians now have more personal debt based on gross income vs. the US.
The new federal governments have the highest debt (for 2009)...
Canada's total debt will jump more than 30 per cent by 2013-14 under current economic conditions, the Toronto-Dominion Bank said Tuesday in a new forecast.
The bank said Ottawa's auto bailout package, as well as a lagging economy, will add $167 billion in new public borrowing over the next five years.
That means government debt, estimated at $462.9 billion at the end of fiscal 2008-09, will rise by 36 per cent during the period to almost $630 billion, according to Don Drummond, TD's chief economist, and Derek Burleton, the bank's director of economic analysis.
Read more: http://www.cbc.ca/money/story/2009/06/02/td-forecast-canada-fiscal.html#ixzz0wMfs10mi
Here is another problem for the future.
Ontario Teachers' Pension Plan (Teachers') is the largest... assets and administers the pensions of 289,000 active and retired teachers in Ontario
â˘Preliminary 2010 funding valuation shows projected $17.1 billion funding shortfall
â˘OTF and Ontario government, with pension plan management, studying options to keep plan financially healthy
Dealing with a funding shortfall
http://www.otpp.com/rtm/rtm_memserv.htm
To deal with a shortfall, the OTF and the government, the two plan sponsors, can:
â˘increase contribution rates;*
â˘reduce pension benefits members will earn in the future;
â˘invoke conditional inflation protection for pension credit earned after 2009; or
â˘adopt a combination of these options.
Membership fast facts
â˘The average age for pensioners was 68 and for teachers was 42 at year end.
â˘The average starting pension for teachers retiring at the 85 factor was $42,900.
â˘The average teacher retiring in 2009 was 58 years old.
â˘The plan has 93 members age 100 or older.
â˘We expect more than 50,000 teachers to retire over the next 11 years