- Reaction score
- 146
- Points
- 710
Thanks, Edward.
Mark
Ottawa
Mark
Ottawa
That would match what we saw on the previous page, and defence spending is its the lowest as a percentage of GDP since before the Second World War.E.R. Campbell said:Adjusted for inflation, spending is at the same level it was in 2005.
http://ww2.nationalpost.com/m/wp/blog.html?b=fullcomment.nationalpost.com/2014/07/08/michael-byers-the-harper-plan-for-unilateral-canadian-disarmamentThe Harper Plan for unilateral Canadian disarmament
Michael Byers
National Post
08 July 2014
Stephen Harper could find himself in unexpected company this autumn, as a contender for the Nobel Peace Prize.
Other Canadians have found themselves in this position: Lester Pearson became a Nobel laureate in 1957 for pioneering UN peacekeeping, an activity for which Roméo Dallaire must later have come close to winning the prize. Stephen Lewis would have been shortlisted for his work on HIV/AIDS, as would have Lloyd Axworthy for the Landmines Convention.
Unexpected company, indeed, for this Conservative prime minister. But consider this: Despite his tough talk about supporting the troops, Stephen Harper has reduced defence spending to just 1% of GDP — the lowest level in Canadian history.
For decades, Canada’s level of defence spending was comparable to that of Denmark, Germany, the Netherlands and Norway (all currently at 1.4%). After the Cold War ended, Jean Chrétien and Paul Martin reduced defence spending to 1.2% of GDP — leading to what General Rick Hillier called a “decade of darkness.” The Afghanistan mission necessitated an increase, with spending returning to 1.4% by 2009.
But then Harper cut deep: At 1% of GDP, Canada’s new defence spending peers are Belgium, Latvia and Slovakia.
Two factors account for the decrease.
First, Harper is focused on delivering a surplus in 2015 that will enable him to cut taxes before the election. Deep spending reductions are therefore needed and, with no significant missions underway or anticipated, the military is an easy target.
Last year, reduced maintenance budgets forced the Army to park many of its trucks, while the Navy tied up half of its patrol vessels. The Air Force cut back on maintenance of its CF-18 fighter jets, with possible safety consequences for its pilots. This year, the PM clawed back an additional $3.1-billion in defence spending.
Second, the Harper government has failed to complete a number of major defence procurement projects and, by so doing, kept them off the budget. For it is the year of spending, not the year of announcing or contracting, which determines when expenditures first show up on the balance sheet.
The delayed procurements have left the military in a weakened state.
In 2006, the Harper government announced the replacement of the Navy’s 45 year-old supply ships. Eight years later, no construction contract has been signed. The new ships are now expected in 2020, with the $2.6-billion expense postponed until then. In the same year, the government promised 1,300 armoured trucks to replace a fleet the Army warned was at risk of “catastrophic failure.” To date, no manufacturer has been selected and $800-million remains unspent.
New search-and-rescue planes were also promised in 2006, to replace a half-century old fleet. This procurement, too, has suffered repeated delays, leaving $1.9-billion hanging. Also in 2006, the government launched a plan to sole-source unmanned aerial vehicles. No contract has been signed and $1-billion remains unspent.
The following year, Arctic/Offshore Patrol Ships were promised. Seven years later, no construction contract has been signed and $3.1-billion remains off the ledger. In 2010, the Harper government announced that F-35 fighter jets would be purchased to replace the CF-18s, at a cost of $9-billion. No contract was signed and the decision was later suspended, after the Auditor General estimated a life-cycle cost of $45-billion for the fleet.
In 2011, the government announced that the Navy’s 44 year-old destroyers would be replaced. No contract has been signed, delivery has slipped to at least 2020, and another $5.2-billion has been deferred. Then, in 2013, the government cancelled a $2-billion purchase of Close Combat Vehicles for the Army.
Finally, there is the never-ending effort to replace the Sea King helicopters. The Martin government signed a contract in 2004, with deliveries promised for 2009. Under Harper, the delivery date has slipped to 2018, with nearly $1.8-billion still to be paid.
It is possible that Harper intends to carry through with these procurements, after pausing to create the temporary illusion of a surplus. If so, he is setting his successor up for a headache. For there is, in fact, a substantial deficit — resulting from over-$25 billion in deferred acquisition costs for military equipment.
Exacerbating matters, inflation rates are higher in defence procurement than in the economy in general, which means that every deferred cost leads to higher final costs and, with that, pressure for reduced orders and lowered capability requirements. In other words, failing to recapitalize the military in a timely manner has created a procurement death spiral, as rusting-out equipment becomes increasingly expensive to replace.
From the perspective of the Nobel Peace Prize Committee in faraway Oslo, Canada is engaged in deep-reaching process of unilateral disarmament. For this reason, Stephen Harper could soon find himself elevated to Pearsonian heights. The prospect of winning the Nobel Peace Prize, however, may be the cause of consternation rather than celebration for Canada’s tough-talking PM.
The issue: DND spends as much as more than half of all the other departments put together. Planning a $20B defence budget is about a hundred, not twenty, times more complicated than planning a $1B Heritage department budget. TBS guidelines and planning models are optimized for the smaller department cases, and TBS has only a dim appreciation of this (up until recently, the TBS defence analyst was also the TBS Canada Post analyst, as though those two portfolios were somehow comparable in scale). DND procurements need to be approached differently, much as the PS would hate to admit it.MarkOttawa said:Serious budgetary sausage-making, at Embassy :
‘Good luck, have the Scotch ready’: Defence Department struggled to meet [TBS] planning expectations into 2013
http://www.embassynews.ca/news/2014/07/23/good-luck-have-the-scotch-ready-defence-department-struggled-to-meet-planning-expectations-into-2013/45823
Mark
Ottawa
hamiltongs said:The issue: DND spends as much as more than half of all the other departments put together. Planning a $20B defence budget is about a hundred, not twenty, times more complicated than planning a $1B Heritage department budget. TBS guidelines and planning models are optimized for the smaller department cases, and TBS has only a dim appreciation of this (up until recently, the TBS defence analyst was also the TBS Canada Post analyst, as though those two portfolios were somehow comparable in scale). DND procurements need to be approached differently, much as the PS would hate to admit it.
The investment plan is a document that government departments must submit to the Treasury Board every three years. The plan “outlines the department's long-term strategic direction and objectives, and articulates how these are aligned with the objectives and priorities of the government of Canada,” the Treasury Board website reads.
The plan must include information on the department’s “strategic plans and priorities,” detailed plans for investing in assets and acquired services, an overview of any issues identified with the department’s management of investments, and more, according to the website.
The investment plan is a “monster” of a document that calls for a large amount of detail, and treats military acquisitions like those from any other government department, said the former senior National Defence official, who would only speak on condition of anonymity.
“You have to write a business case on why you need to buy a tank,” the former official said.
RoyalDrew said:text taken from the article http://www.embassynews.ca/news/2014/07/23/good-luck-have-the-scotch-ready-defence-department-struggled-to-meet-planning-expectations-into-2013/45823
The above statements were the part of the document that caught my eye the most. It tells me that we have no strategic plans or priorities which is concerning. Some would say this is because the government hasn't given us any direction which has left us in limbo. I don't agree with this because while the government's direction may be vague, they have given us a budget and they have given us a broad ranging document in the Canada First Defence Strategy.
Why doesn't the department practice what they preach and exercise a little bit of mission command and get on with it already. In the absence of direction, make your own. At least that's what I was always told.
Also, to whomever this former "National Defence Official" is. While we may not cut the same slice of bacon as other departments, why should that preclude us from having a business plan? We are in the business of war but that doesn't mean we are allowed to be wasteful as last time I looked economy of effort and administration were two key principles.
What's so wrong with having to define why we need to buy a tank or any other tool in our toolbox for that matter?
RoyalDrew said:Why doesn't the department practice what they preach and exercise a little bit of mission command and get on with it already.
Deputy Minister C.R. “Buzz” Nixon declared in 1982 that NDHQ was staffed inappropriately by military officers who were incapable of managing well in the Ottawa environment, and that “military parochialism,” or friction between the services within the military, was contributing to several projects and ideas being unsuccessful in Ottawa.
We are too ready to break/by-pass/ignore procedures for major projects without understanding either the reason those procedures exist or the long-term perils from which they protect us.E.R. Campbell said:There is a reason, as I have mentioned many times in the past, why the policy centre in Ottawa (PCO, Finance and TB) do not trust DND: they think thatweyouDND's leadership and senior management are lazy and waaaay too self important, too full of themselves.
dapaterson said:A far more interesting read is MGen (ret'd) Gosselin's history of civilians in NDHQ and the frictions that resulted.
http://www.journal.forces.gc.ca/vol14/no3/page38-eng.asp
dapaterson said:A far more interesting read is MGen (ret'd) Gosselin's history of civilians in NDHQ and the frictions that resulted.
http://www.journal.forces.gc.ca/vol14/no3/page38-eng.asp