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Comment: Private investment drives the Canadian economy

GWYN MORGAN After five years of suffering in eco-zealot purgatory under the Trudeau Liberals, the half million or so Canadians whose livelihood depends on the oil and gas industry finally got some good news: The oilsands are now part of the governmen

GWYN MORGAN

After five years of suffering in eco-zealot purgatory under the Trudeau Liberals, the half million or so Canadians whose livelihood depends on the oil and gas industry finally got some good news: The oilsands are now part of the government’s green energy agenda!

In an Aug. 12 interview, Natural Resources Minister Seamus O’Regan told the National Post’s Derek Brower, “there’s no way we are reaching net-zero (Canada’s 2050 emissions target) without Alberta.”

O’Regan went on to express support for new pipelines that would allow output to grow by over a million barrels per day next year and continue to rise after that.

In stark contrast to the Liberal government’s previous vilification of the industry, O’Regan lauded the ingenuity of Albertans in finding ways to “draw oil out of sand.”

This stunning reversal couldn’t have been imagined prior to the COVID-19 crisis. Why now?

The answer came in the minister’s own words: “our prosperity and our economy are still highly dependent on it.”

How dependent? The industry is by far the largest contributor to both GDP and net export revenue, each more than $100 billion per year.

And Alberta has long been the largest net (money sent versus received) contributor to Ottawa’s coffers, amounting to $95 billion from 2014 to 2018, more than all other provinces put together.

The $83 billion revenue drop in former finance minister Bill Morneau’s July 8 “fiscal snapshot” shows why growing Ottawa’s most important revenue source is so critical.

The snapshot projected an astonishing $343 billion deficit.

Two days later, the government announced employment insurance system changes that will cost $37 billion, taking the deficit to $380 billion. Further spending escalation is a certainty, including help for stretched provincial health care budgets, cities unable to fund public transportation and hard-hit business sectors.

It’s now clear that our national debt will exceed $1.2 trillion, twice what it was when the Liberals came to power in 2015.

The last time Canada faced such an enormous financial challenge was after the Second World War.

Back then, demographics came to the rescue: the post-war baby boom, combined with soldiers returning home to help produce desperately needed consumer goods, transformed the economic picture.

Now we have the complete reverse. Decades of collapsing birth rates have created a “baby bust” and those self-same baby-boomers are now leaving the workforce and driving higher public spending for old age security payments and eldercare.

And yet, as the saying goes, “we ain’t seen nothin’ yet.”

COVID-19 is causing a massive restructuring of vital business sectors.

Retail, which employs millions of Canadians and occupies vast amounts of real estate from street-side shops to malls, faces profound uncertainty from the pandemic-driven shift to online shopping.

Lockdowns facilitated an array of new communication tools that allow many of us to work remotely, emptying office towers.

The potential impacts are staggering, including mass unemployment and devaluation of the commercial real estate that underlies both public and private pension funds.

The full impact of these and other post-COVID structural shifts, especially in transportation and accommodation, are yet to be known, but it’s clear they will be profound. Government tax revenues will fall, while the need for support and training of displaced workers will increase.

In the face of such alarming prospects, it seems the coronavirus has fostered escape to a fantasy state where reality is magically replaced by an imagined world that is whatever one wishes it to be.

It’s baffling to hear our government declare the pandemic has created an “opportunity for public investment in green restructuring of the economy,” which translates into subsidizing windmill and solar-power companies.

How will that work out? Ask Ontarians. They have seen home and business electricity rates skyrocket to produce very expensive and completely unreliable power.

Navigating these shoals would be difficult enough if our economic outlook had been strong before the crisis. But alas, that wasn’t the case.

Statistics Canada data shows that, since election of the Trudeau government in 2015, investment in 10 of our 15 major business sectors has dropped by 17 per cent, as both Canadian and foreign investors have fled. More than $185 billion left the country.

This exodus mirrored sharp drops in our performance in both the World Bank Ease of Doing Business ranking and the World Economic Forum Competitiveness Index. Canada’s strong employment rate over this period was driven by unsustainable deficit spending, not private sector investment.

Reigniting private-sector investment that will generate, rather than consume, government revenues will require a clear and profound reversal of both attitude and action by the Trudeau Liberals.

Minister O’Regan’s comments about the oil and gas industry must be followed by clear, early federal government action. Similar encouragement and action are needed for other resource sectors, including mining, where an Alberta mine expansion proposal has recently seen federal action to stop it.

Here’s a note to our new Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland: Achieving private sector investment and job creation is the only hope for keeping the good ship Canada from smashing onto the post-COVID rocks, sinking a nation that held such great potential.

Gwyn Morgan is a retired business leader who has been a director of five global corporations.