Close X
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
ADVT 
National

Senators call for post-pandemic economic rethink

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 28 Sep, 2021 10:24 AM
  • Senators call for post-pandemic economic rethink

OTTAWA - A group of senators is calling on the federal government to strike a grand economic plan with provinces, territories, businesses and civil society to drive growth coming out of the pandemic.

The report includes calls to rethink how to deliver skills-training programs, to streamline the regulatory system to encourage entrepreneurs and for companies to invest in themselves.

The document also says the federal government must come up with a more credible plan to manage the nation's burgeoning debt through new rules to guide budgetary decisions.

Senators say the Trudeau Liberals must consider finding more new sources of revenue and suggest the government increase the value of federal sales tax.

The report made public Tuesday is the culmination of work that started last November and included interviews with some 70 domestic and international experts about how Canada could avoid another era of low economic growth.

Sen. Peter Harder, one of the 12 senators who worked on the report, says the group believes the country shouldn't wait until after the pandemic to rethink how to improve Canada's economic performance.

"This is very much a national task," he said in an interview. "It's not going to be easy, but is absolutely essential if we want to improve our competitive performance."

Canada's economy faced headwinds prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, including productivity declines that mean Canadians work longer to match the output of counterparts in the G7 countries.

Waning business investment, which could reverse the productivity decline, is also lower in Canada than many peer nations.

The report from senators singles out the domestic tech sector for extra attention.

It recommends governments help improve access to capital and streamline regulatory regimes to help companies grow and compete globally.

Sen. Colin Deacon said regulatory changes wouldn't cost the government money, and allow new, innovative businesses to enter the market.

It would be a change in mentality for governments by moving “to catalyze, not control,” by putting in key policy frameworks for the digital economy and regulating where needed.

Deacon said the mentality shift is possible, noting how quickly federal officials crafted emergency aid programs for workers and businesses.

“What we did see in the initial response to the pandemic was government willing to put forward a plan, examine how it was working, and iterate,” he said. "And that doesn't happen. Normally, what happens in government is they put forward a plan, and then they dig in."

Any new spending will be heaped on top of the historic debt levels. The Liberals have promised to focus on having the debt decline as a proportion of the overall economy, known as the debt-to-GDP ratio.

The report recommends two alternative measures: keeping debt service costs below 10 per cent of federal revenues, an idea put forward by former Bank of Canada governor David Dodge, or cap federal program spending as a percentage of gross domestic product.

Senators say there isn't a need for austerity, but rather a need to avoid financing new programs through more debt.

The group also suggests raising the Goods and Services Tax to seven per cent from five per cent, and increase the value of the GST tax credit to offset costs for low-income households. A C.D. Howe Institute report estimated the measures could yield $15 billion annually in new tax revenues.

Harder said spending guidelines and new revenue measures would signal the government takes seriously the need to manage the debt.

"That in itself creates economic confidence going forward that governments will be responsible in their fiscal programming," he said.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

785 COVID19 cases for Wednesday

785 COVID19 cases for Wednesday
B.C. added 785 new COVID-19 cases for Wednesday. There have now been 166,853 cases of COVID-19 in B.C. since the pandemic began, as well as 1,818 related deaths.

785 COVID19 cases for Wednesday

Threatening note received at Langley Islamic Center

Threatening note received at Langley Islamic Center
Investigators have engaged the BC Hate Crime Unit and INSET (Integrated National Security Enforcement Team) to collaborate and are endeavouring to identify the author of the note and following all investigative avenues in this investigation.

Threatening note received at Langley Islamic Center

Burnaby RCMP ask for public assistance in identifying a suspect that may have been involved in3 unprovoked assaults

Burnaby RCMP ask for public assistance in identifying a suspect that may have been involved in3 unprovoked assaults
On Monday, August 30, at approximately 1:40 p.m., an unknown man approached a 25-year-old woman and wrestled her to the ground in the area of Edmonds Street and Canada Way. It’s believed the victim may have been followed for a short distance.    

Burnaby RCMP ask for public assistance in identifying a suspect that may have been involved in3 unprovoked assaults

Two children involved in Vancouver coyote attacks

Two children involved in Vancouver coyote attacks
Conservation officers are patrolling the park and the service says it's working with provincial wildlife biologists to determine how to manage the animals.

Two children involved in Vancouver coyote attacks

Can we reach herd immunity with COVID-19?

Can we reach herd immunity with COVID-19?
Herd immunity refers to having enough people within a community protected from a virus or pathogen, either through natural infection or vaccination, that transmission becomes unlikely.

Can we reach herd immunity with COVID-19?

Evacuation orders due to B.C. wildfires drop

Evacuation orders due to B.C. wildfires drop
The emergency operations centre for the central Okanagan says assessments of neighbourhoods directly affected by the 830-square-kilometre White Rock Lake fire along the western banks of Okanagan Lake should be complete by Thursday.

Evacuation orders due to B.C. wildfires drop