- Reaction score
- 35
- Points
- 560
Perhaps the repetition of Bob Rae's experiment in Socialist Economics in Ontario by the McGuinty government will settle some arguments here. Since I am currently stuck in Ontario, (and a veteran of Rae Days etc.) I am examining my options very closely indeed. (One rather unpalatable but possible option is to parlay an idea I'm working on into a spot at the trough. Perhaps a better one is to appeal to my wifes family to get Green cards. Or maybe I'll lower my expectations yet again and muddle through)
http://voterick.com/wordpress/?p=91
http://voterick.com/wordpress/?p=91
The Great (Taxcuts vs Bribes) Debate
Boil the McGuinty-Flaherty feud to its essence and what remains is the divide between governance styles. While Flaherty is making most of the noise the Liberals have much at stake because under no economic circumstances are they ever ready to alter their tried and true, bribe and conquer approach.
It is being argued that this is strictly political, that it is a recycled feud and so on. It is all of those, but most of all it is about clinging to your core modus operandi. The harder job is Flaherty’s and that’s why he is being aggressive. The federal government will get blamed for possible economic retraction, and they have been caught with their defenses down. The economic turmoil is unfolding faster than anyone had anticipated. With a currency that is making us uncompetitive, limited maneuvering room in interest rates, and no additional spending room, there is only one way to stanch the bleeding – lower business costs. But Flaherty knows this cannot be a one man job. Ontario is too big and important to be allowed to play its own game.
In today’s Ontario budget (this was written before its release) we will hear the other side of the story. Be prepared to hear many invocations about investments. Investments are Liberal speak for bribes. They will be seen to be doing socially conscious things (meals for school kids) which are good for votes. They will claim that it is not possible to allot some money to the decrease of business taxes,without throwing all those kids out of school. In the next breath, they will allot similar amounts to make geographically specific handouts to manufacturers. These are good for votes.
Windsorites have always been big on these, but do they work? Well, what about the fifty million Ontario gave to a local car manufacturer to upgrade their paint facilities. Shortly after the bombast and photo ops and claims of job security had wafted to the ground, 1000 people were trimmed from the operations of that assembly. It’s a mug’s game, and neither McGuinty nor Dwight Duncan have shown the acumen required to pick a winner. (Look around you if you doubt it.) Why is one firm’s need greater than another, anyway?
There is a disclaimer being voiced, that lower corporate taxes can only help profitable firms, and that all those wanting to leave are not profitable, so tax cuts are useless. But a World Bank (part of the IMF) study recently rated 178 countries, by assessing all of their business tax costs, including employment taxes, property and transportation and other taxes such as GST and PST. Canada placed 99th and Ontario, if rated would have been about 139. Does this matter to the companies already in trouble? No, the changes should have been made sooner. But to companies thinking of locating here (?) it matters plenty. They are not planning to set up shop here in order to reap losses, and they certainly can’t wait for McGuinty to decide if they are winners, or green enough, or in a prized Liberal riding.
None of the above information would matter to McGuinty if it was delivered in tablets from on high. This is simply not the way Liberals do business. Tax cuts are just too indiscriminate and might fall into the wrong, ungrateful hands.
This entry was posted on Tuesday, March 25th, 2008 at 2:23 pm and is filed under Politics. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.