No normal person pays close attention to who is “in” or “out” as finance minister, and that’s a good thing. It means the politician in question has avoided messing up the lives of ordinary 91ԭs. Still, their actions can and do matter, for better or worse.
Every politician wants to leave a positive legacy, so here are some possibilities for the new federal Conservative finance minister, Joe Oliver.
• Do no harm. This is not as easy as it sounds. Governments are often tempted to interfere and re-interfere. Fact is, for a country to thrive, boring predictability is needed. Businesses and taxpayers put up with much from governments, but they will only invest in a country as long as the rules are clear and rarely change.
• Try practising neutrality in the tax system. Oliver’s predecessor, Jim Flaherty, kept mucking up the tax code with ever-more gimmicky “boutique” tax credits.
It is much better to have fewer credits and deductions and lower overall tax rates, be it for individual taxpayers or businesses. When it comes to the tax system, “lower, flatter, and simpler” is preferable to “higher, ratcheted-up rates and complicated.”
• Stop running all those “economic action plan” ads that brag about how spending $64 billion in taxpayer dollars saved Canada from the recession. For one thing, it’s not true. The recession ended in June 2009, and most of our tax dollars were spent after that month and in subsequent years. And anyway, the recession ended almost five years ago. Isn’t it time to pull the plug on all this expensive advertising?
• Stop beating up our foreign friends. When the Conservative government quashed the potential takeover of Saskatchewan Potash by an Australian company, it set a terrible precedent.
The government of Canada acted more like a banana republic regime (i.e. Venezuela) rather than following the 91ԭ tradition of peace, order and good government.
It is one thing to deny the export of sensitive military technology bound for Iran or to forbid state-owned Chinese companies from majority ownership in Canada. But it is quite another to forbid routine takeovers from companies located in friendly jurisdictions.
• Favour the general interest of taxpayers and consumers over the narrow interests of producers.
The federal government has, at times, made consumers and taxpayers the policy priority, as when it dropped some tariffs on imports, most recently in the Canada-South Korea free trade agreement.
But much more can be done to favour the general interest.
Government could end the “supply management” system for dairy and poultry products that benefits producers but harms consumers. It could end subsidies to business, an action that favours specific companies at the expense of competitors and taxpayers. It could reform compensation and pension in the government sector that produces pay, perks and pensions 12 per cent over the broad private sector.
• Be more transparent. The former finance minister spent $13.7 billion in taxpayer cash to bail out General Motors and Chrysler. He then falsely claimed Chrysler had paid back all the money, and was never terribly open about the money flows.
In contrast, the U.S. federal Treasury department reports monthly and on the web about their Troubled Asset Relief Program.
In Canada, the finance department under Flaherty produced no such clarity; quite the opposite. It is long overdue to produce a clearer accounting of all that stimulus money, as well as transparency in other government spending.
Neutrality, smarter spending, broad-based tax relief instead of gimmicks, favouring consumers over producers, and transparency; that’s a legacy for which any new finance minister should aim.
Mark Milke is a senior fellow at the Fraser Institute.