01)
THE FEDERAL BUDGET: A "SMOKE AND MIRRORS SHAM"
(The
following
article is from the February 1-14, 2009, issue of People's Voice,
Canada's
leading communist newspaper. Articles can be reprinted free if the
source is credited. Subscription rates in Canada: $25/year, or $12 low
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Manager, 133 Herkimer St., Unit 502, Hamilton, ON, L8P 2H3.) Commentary from the Central Executive
Committee, Communist Party of Canada, Jan. 27, 2009
The political mindset has changed in
Ottawa since last fall, but not nearly as much as most analysts of the
Jan. 27 federal budget suggest. This is not surprising, since Finance
Minister Jim Flaherty's "budget consultations" were conducted almost
exclusively with big business and right-wing think tanks. As the global
economic crisis deepens, this budget prioritizes bail-outs for the
banks and other lenders, and tax hand-outs to business, while ignoring
the urgent needs of workers and the unemployed - further proof that the
Harper minority government remains a trusted tool of the ruling class
and a bitter enemy of working people across Canada. More than ever, a
massive struggle by the working class and other democratic forces is
needed to drive the Tories out of office.
Stephen
Harper, Jim Flaherty and
the Tory cabinet remain diehard advocates of neo-con ideology. The
ruling Conservatives have been compelled by events to bring in a
`stimulus package' which combined with falling government revenues will
result in a $64 billion deficit for the next two years. But the
far-right Tory agenda remains in place, thinly disguised by smoke and
mirrors such as minor announcements of infrastructure spending,
designed to maintain Harper's grip on power.
The current
crisis proves that
reality trumps the abstractions of bourgeois economic theory. For more
than two decades, all the major capitalist governments have a strategy
of deregulation, privatization, social cuts, massive tax breaks for the
rich and corporations and increased military spending, and have imposed
these neoliberal policies on so-called `less developed' states. Surely,
if this "Washington consensus" truly possessed the powers its acolytes
claim, capitalism would have entered a higher realm of crisis-free
expansion, with benefits flowing from the top of the pile down to the
lowest sections of the working class.
But suddenly
- as predicted by
more objective economists and by the Communist Party (see People's
Voice, January 1-15, 2008) - the edifice has collapsed. Not only
are
neo-con policies unable to tame the inherent "boom-bust" cycle of
capitalism, they actually make the crash far more severe when it does
arrive. The huge profits and asset growth of recent years stand
revealed as mere spectres, projected by financial manipulation,
over-heated housing and real estate markets, and the "bubbles" of
speculation and unprecedented debt.
Even before
last September, the
real impact of neo-con policies in North America was evident to any
careful observer. The gap between rich and poor has reached staggering
levels, tens of millions of working people were swamped by huge debt
loads, the manufacturing sector was devastated. Similar trends were
witnessed in Europe. Now, as millions of jobs vanish, parties which
preached the neo-con gospel are bending the knee to the formerly
reviled tenets of Keynesianism.
This shift
does reflect a
powerful consensus among voters that an economic boost is desperately
needed. In virtually every major capitalist country, governments are
adopting policies to avert complete collapse, spending trillions of
dollars on infrastructure and bailouts. To some extent, this is simply
playing catch-up after years of cutbacks to schools and hospitals, of
neglecting everything from sewage systems to crumbling bridges.
Governments which poured billions into military expansion while cutting
tax rates - such as the Harper Tories (and the Liberals before them) -
are now responding to public pressures by going into deficit to pay for
some urgent priorities.
But the
devil lurks in the
details. Sixty-four billion dollars over two years sounds like a lot,
but Harper's "stimulus" is less than 1.5% of Canada's Gross Domestic
Product, far below the 2.5% planned in the US, and well short of what
will be required to `jump-start' the sputtering domestic economy. Over
half of the Tory deficit is simply a shortfall of revenue projections
caused by the economic downturn and Harper's $12 billion in tax cuts
implemented last year.
Not content
with this cut to
future government revenues, the Tories are accelerating their corporate
tax reductions. Their "across-the-board" tax cuts are actually a shift
towards a "flat tax" system, benefitting those in high-income brackets
far more than low and lower-middle income earners.
Despite the
rhetoric, the real
needs of working people are not addressed by this budget. Half of the
$2 billion promised for social housing will go towards renovations, not
new homes. This allocation is feeble compared to the amount budgeted
for home sales/renovations, the bulk of which is really a hidden
subsidy to the real estate and construction industry. Nor is there
anything for those who do not own homes, or protection for families
facing foreclosures.
There is
nothing in the budget
for a Canada-wide child care program, to improve healthcare, or to
reduce the debt burdens faced by post-secondary students. The budget
also carries over some of the worst provisions of Flaherty's disastrous
"economic statement" from last November, including the attack of pay
equity rights for women, an imposed wage ceiling for federal workers
and the sell-off of $2 billion in public assets to corporate interests.
Far from
assisting the
unemployed, this budget continues the Tory war on the poor. The
extension of EI benefits by five weeks is minimal, the waiting period
remains in place, and access to miserly benefits (still pegged at only
55% of former earnings) remains limited to about one-third of the
growing ranks of unemployed. The $2 billion for retraining jobless
workers is a tiny fraction of the $54 billion stolen from the
unemployed over the years through Liberal and Tory cuts to EI benefits.
The federal minimum wage is unchanged, and the budget does nothing to
protect and raise pensions, or to improve social assistance.
The
infrastructure spending is
spread thinly across the country. Instead of a new financial deal for
cities, the budget contains "poison pill" provisions compelling
provinces and municipalities to cough up matching funds. As a result,
many so-called "shovel-ready" projects will remain sidelined, since
cash-starved local governments lack necessary taxation powers or
sufficient support from higher levels of government.
The budget
does nothing to stem
the loss of manufacturing and to protect industrial jobs - no plant
closure legislation, nothing to make government financial support
conditional on keeping plants open without lay-offs or wage cuts.
Despite the enormous deficit, there are no cuts to the bloated military
budget and the discredited and disastrous mission in Afghanistan.
After all
Harper's claims to be
"listening" to the Canadian people and to understand the need for new
policies, the Jan. 27 budget does nothing to tackle the very serious
structural problems plaguing social and economic life in Canada:
growing unemployment and homelessness, an ever-widening income gap,
deindustrialisation, completely inadequate social programs, racist
oppression of Aboriginal peoples, environmental destruction, the
sell-out of Canadian sovereignty. In essence, the budget is simply a
political effort to salvage the fortunes of the Conservative party.
The Liberals
under their new
leader Michael Ignatieff have decided to support the budget, hoping to
regain their position as the "favoured party" of big capital. This
decision finishes the Liberal-NDP coalition which millions of working
people had hoped would defeat the most reactionary, pro-business,
militaristic, sell-out government in Canadian history.
But as
Canada faces the deepest
economic crisis in generations, the labour and democratic movements
cannot accept this outcome quietly. We urge an escalated struggle to
unite the working class and its allies into mass actions to drive the
Harper Tories out of office, and to win the pro-people policies so
desperately needed at this crucial moment.