Here's What We Can Expect
John Ivison, National Post Published: Saturday, February 27, 2010
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Two months after MPs last met on Parliament Hill, the House of Commons will once again echo to the characteristic sounds of Question Period next week -- the opposition asking fatuous questions and the government not answering them.
First, though, we have the pomp and ceremony of the Governor-General reading the Speech from the Throne on Wednesday and a budget the following day. What can we expect? What will be the thrust of the government's new agenda? Who will take the Opposition leader's chair -- the lion who roared into the chamber at the start of last year, or the mouse who scuttled off at its tail end? Is it possible to bring down a government over a do-nothing budget?
The Conservatives have signalled, in broad fashion, what their program will be. They have already indicated there will be no new tax cuts or recurring spending measures, beyond the $19-billion already earmarked to fund year two of the Economic Action Plan. The focus will turn to the $56-billion deficit and, while there will be no absolute spending cuts, growth in all government departments will be crimped.
This suggests that any activity the government does announce will be at minimal new cost. As the National Post revealed last month, the Prime Minister sent out new mandate letters to his Cabinet telling them not to bring forward any unfunded proposals without receiving his prior approval. Only those proposals that addressed health, safety or national security concerns would be added to the list of projects he and his staff had identified in the mandate letter
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ON THE CHOPPING BLOCK
Little sign stimulus working
Terence Corcoran, Financial Post Published: Saturday, February 27, 2010
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They say federal spending cannot be cut and the federal budget cannot be balanced. They even say spending must not be cut now, at this critical time, and that we need the federal government's $160-billion in deficit spending to maintain and stimulate economic growth.
In lock-step with these ideas -- at least tacitly endorsed by all of Canada's mainstream and Bay Street economists -- Finance Minister Jim Flaherty is reportedly ready to march the federal government into another big deficit and another high-spending budget next Thursday. There have been hints that some spending restraint might be introduced, but Mr. Flaherty is holding fast to the idea that government deficit spending, labelled stimulus, is essential to Canada's economic health.
"The first thing to do is make sure that the economy recovers, that's absolutely imperative," Mr. Flaherty said recently. "Once we see a sustained recovery, then we'll start moving back toward deficit reduction and then balanced budgets."
While government spending is all the rage in Canada and abroad, few explain exactly how this onslaught of government activity actually produces growth. U.S. President Barack Obama is under constant pressure to come up with another stimulus package on top of the US$862-billion extravaganza already in place on the assumption that the more the state does, even with deficits, the faster the U.S. and world economies will return to growth.
But what if it doesn't? What if, as much evidence suggests, it's all a crock of economic mumbo-jumbo that, at best, is an unproved bit of economic theory. The problem is not so much whether the theory is right or wrong; the problem is that it has never been shown to be true.
The foundation for the theory that government must take up more spending to stimulate the economy is largely the work of John Maynard Keynes, the early 20th-century economist, and his successors. Their ideas dominate economic convention, economic modelling, economists on Bay Street and Wall Street, and universities.
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Cutting federal spending is a lot harder than it sounds; Trimming across the board the 'coward's approach': economist
Saturday, February 27th, 2010 Canwest News Service
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The first time they get to Parliament, MPs take one look at the massive amount of money the federal government spends every year and decide it ought to be an easy thing to find the fat to trim.
"Every single minister of finance and every single president of the Treasury Board comes in with that exact statement and every single one of them has left with their tail between their legs when they finally realize that almost all the money is assigned to some program," said Don Drummond, the chief economist at TD Bank.
Before joining TD Bank, Mr. Drummond was one of the top bureaucrats at the federal Finance Department and played a key role in crafting the historic budget of 1996. That budget, introduced by then-finance minister Paul Martin as Canada's debt was ballooning out of control, contained a massive $11.7-billion worth of spending cuts. No government has ever come close to that kind of cut.
Mr. Martin would deliver another round of spending cuts in the 1998 budget and is one of just three finance ministers since 1960 to have wrangled in a budget that actually cut Ottawa's spending.
Bureaucrats and politicians agree: the list of finance ministers who cut spending is a short one because cutting spending is one of the toughest things a politician can do. Even controlling growth in spending has not been easily accomplished. In the last 50 federal budgets, spending growth has been held to 3% or less just 12 times, most recently by Jim Flaherty in 2008. That year, he held spending growth to 2.6%. Then the recession hit and Mr. Flaherty, like finance ministers around the world, turned on the taps. Spending in last year's budget grew by $33.8-billion or 14.1% compared to 2008.
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John Ivison, National Post Published: Saturday, February 27, 2010
Article Link
Two months after MPs last met on Parliament Hill, the House of Commons will once again echo to the characteristic sounds of Question Period next week -- the opposition asking fatuous questions and the government not answering them.
First, though, we have the pomp and ceremony of the Governor-General reading the Speech from the Throne on Wednesday and a budget the following day. What can we expect? What will be the thrust of the government's new agenda? Who will take the Opposition leader's chair -- the lion who roared into the chamber at the start of last year, or the mouse who scuttled off at its tail end? Is it possible to bring down a government over a do-nothing budget?
The Conservatives have signalled, in broad fashion, what their program will be. They have already indicated there will be no new tax cuts or recurring spending measures, beyond the $19-billion already earmarked to fund year two of the Economic Action Plan. The focus will turn to the $56-billion deficit and, while there will be no absolute spending cuts, growth in all government departments will be crimped.
This suggests that any activity the government does announce will be at minimal new cost. As the National Post revealed last month, the Prime Minister sent out new mandate letters to his Cabinet telling them not to bring forward any unfunded proposals without receiving his prior approval. Only those proposals that addressed health, safety or national security concerns would be added to the list of projects he and his staff had identified in the mandate letter
More on link
ON THE CHOPPING BLOCK
Little sign stimulus working
Terence Corcoran, Financial Post Published: Saturday, February 27, 2010
Article Link
They say federal spending cannot be cut and the federal budget cannot be balanced. They even say spending must not be cut now, at this critical time, and that we need the federal government's $160-billion in deficit spending to maintain and stimulate economic growth.
In lock-step with these ideas -- at least tacitly endorsed by all of Canada's mainstream and Bay Street economists -- Finance Minister Jim Flaherty is reportedly ready to march the federal government into another big deficit and another high-spending budget next Thursday. There have been hints that some spending restraint might be introduced, but Mr. Flaherty is holding fast to the idea that government deficit spending, labelled stimulus, is essential to Canada's economic health.
"The first thing to do is make sure that the economy recovers, that's absolutely imperative," Mr. Flaherty said recently. "Once we see a sustained recovery, then we'll start moving back toward deficit reduction and then balanced budgets."
While government spending is all the rage in Canada and abroad, few explain exactly how this onslaught of government activity actually produces growth. U.S. President Barack Obama is under constant pressure to come up with another stimulus package on top of the US$862-billion extravaganza already in place on the assumption that the more the state does, even with deficits, the faster the U.S. and world economies will return to growth.
But what if it doesn't? What if, as much evidence suggests, it's all a crock of economic mumbo-jumbo that, at best, is an unproved bit of economic theory. The problem is not so much whether the theory is right or wrong; the problem is that it has never been shown to be true.
The foundation for the theory that government must take up more spending to stimulate the economy is largely the work of John Maynard Keynes, the early 20th-century economist, and his successors. Their ideas dominate economic convention, economic modelling, economists on Bay Street and Wall Street, and universities.
More on link
Cutting federal spending is a lot harder than it sounds; Trimming across the board the 'coward's approach': economist
Saturday, February 27th, 2010 Canwest News Service
Article Link
The first time they get to Parliament, MPs take one look at the massive amount of money the federal government spends every year and decide it ought to be an easy thing to find the fat to trim.
"Every single minister of finance and every single president of the Treasury Board comes in with that exact statement and every single one of them has left with their tail between their legs when they finally realize that almost all the money is assigned to some program," said Don Drummond, the chief economist at TD Bank.
Before joining TD Bank, Mr. Drummond was one of the top bureaucrats at the federal Finance Department and played a key role in crafting the historic budget of 1996. That budget, introduced by then-finance minister Paul Martin as Canada's debt was ballooning out of control, contained a massive $11.7-billion worth of spending cuts. No government has ever come close to that kind of cut.
Mr. Martin would deliver another round of spending cuts in the 1998 budget and is one of just three finance ministers since 1960 to have wrangled in a budget that actually cut Ottawa's spending.
Bureaucrats and politicians agree: the list of finance ministers who cut spending is a short one because cutting spending is one of the toughest things a politician can do. Even controlling growth in spending has not been easily accomplished. In the last 50 federal budgets, spending growth has been held to 3% or less just 12 times, most recently by Jim Flaherty in 2008. That year, he held spending growth to 2.6%. Then the recession hit and Mr. Flaherty, like finance ministers around the world, turned on the taps. Spending in last year's budget grew by $33.8-billion or 14.1% compared to 2008.
More on link