Beware Government Downloading

Beware Government Downloading

Description image by Alan Broadbent Expert in urban issues; leader in Canadian politics and public discourse.
  • First Posted: Mar 10 2010 07:15 AM
  • Updated: 9 months ago

Governments claim they are getting their fiscal house in order. In reality, they are passing the buck.

Canada’s federal government is projected to have a deficit of over $50 billion this year. The Ontario government’s deficit will be over $14 billion. Neither of these governments expects to balance their budget before 2015, and most experts think it will take much longer. Even Alberta and B.C. will have deficits of $4 and $2 billion respectively.

The world financial collapse has hit Canada and its provinces hard. Their revenues have been sharply curtailed by the shrinking economy. Add to that Ottawa’s self-inflicted wound of cutting the GST by two points against the advice of almost all economists, and governments find themselves back in the fiscal bog of high deficits and rising debt.

We’ve been here before. From 1970 to 1995, Canada’s deficit and debt grew, about half of it during 16 years of Liberal governments and half during nine years of Conservative governments. Canada wasn’t alone, as the U.S., U.K., France, and most other countries did the same thing. But by the mid-nineties, alarm bells were sounding, and governments began to rein in their fiscal adventuring, aided in no small part by robust economies and rising government revenues.

In Canada, the discipline started with the federal government. It had a number of tactics, one of the most successful being “downloading.” Downloading is a simple strategy of ceasing activities that cost money while keeping the money that was meant to pay for them. In the years after 1995, the federal government reduced program spending by 10 per cent, in good part by reducing transfers to the provinces. This left the burden to cover those costs on provincial budgets which were also under stress. The federal budget was balanced, but then, so were the budgets of other Western countries that had not made such program cuts due to the rising world economy.

The provinces viewed the federal downloading trick with equal parts dismay and grudging admiration for such fiscal alchemy. They decided to try it themselves and began to download to their municipalities. Thus the costs of roads, social housing, and many other things suddenly became municipal responsibilities. What has resulted is a decade of deficits for city governments, particularly the larger cities with expensive infrastructure like transit systems. These deficits are, for the most part, not the result of wasteful city governments, but of structural gaps between their limited sources of revenue and their increased responsibilities. Cities cannot charge income and sales taxes, the two largest revenue producers, and are limited largely to property tax.

One of the reasons this worked so well for the federal and provincial governments was that it was done before many people noticed and certainly before the impacts began to be felt. Only later did the gaps in building transit, growing lists of people waiting for affordable or supportive housing, increasing use of food banks, and traffic tying up both commerce and commuters become apparent. Even now, many people don’t realize that a lot of the problems they face day-to-day are a result of a fundamental structural problem that was created when the downloading began 15 years ago.

There are solutions. One is for Canadians to get over the unreasonable notion that the public goods they want come free or on the cheap. “Taxes are the price we pay for civilization,” Oliver Wendell Holmes said. Of course tax money must be well spent, but doing without it in modern Canada is an unrealistic option.

A second solution is to let cities have more revenue tools so that they can better bear the brunt of the downloaded obligations. And if cities had access to income and sales tax instruments to help pay for their programs, citizens would have a much better understanding of where their tax dollars were going and could make a choice about which level of government deserved their money the most. People might be quite happy to pay for regular transit service, better snow clearing, or more frequent garbage pickup, but less happy to pay for a foreign war or hinterland highway. They might even let the relevant government know by email or ballot. As many people have pointed out, there is only one tax dollar, and maybe governments should compete on a level playing field for it.

The final solution is our watchfulness. Canadians would be well advised to watch for a new cascade of downloading, cloaked by federal government rhetoric about “fiscal responsibility,” provincial promises of “sharing responsibilities,” and general advice about getting houses in order. While governments get things in order, we might well be crushed by the downloading avalanche.

This article was originally published as a Maytree Opinion.

TAGS: Politics

Comments

Re:Marks

rules of engagement

It's probably true that given the opportunity people would direct their tax dollars towards services that directly benefit themselves - snow clearing rather than foreign wars or hinterland highways. The only catch is that Canada would lose the capacity to fight foreign wars or repair highways in rural Canada. Why should I, a Torontonian, pay into building a hospital in Lambton County, or a school on a reserve in Northern Ontario, or a peacekeeping mission in Kosovo? Well, because we're living in a country here. And I frankly prefer that to a loose affiliation of city states separated by a vast and inaccessible hinterland. Say no to the me-first city-centrism of the new urbanists.

Michael Morden

What's not explicitly said is that downloading results in higher taxes at the municipal level. Taxes and user fees applied at the municipal level have risen beyond any taxes saved at the Federal and Provincial level. This has affected the middle classes, negatively, the most as middle class wealth is usually measured in real estate and not necessarily financial investment. Real property taxes paid by the middle class are out of control since the neo-conservative agenda has served up income and GST reductions. As government services, of any stripe, are reduced or eliminated due to lack of funding, people in need of those, previously tax funded, services must find alternate sources. Usually resulting in more out of pocket expense. It's just a shell game!

Fresh Blather

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