Balanced budgets are sometimes seen as passé. All the main parties federally seem now to have decided that deficits are also not something to get too excited about in the short term, (though those same long-term demographic trends
actually work in the feds’ favour, so in this case they happen to be at least partially right); the Wynne government in Ontario treated deficits as something best viewed from a great distance. And of course, south of the border, Republicans decided deficits didn’t matter just as soon as they got the chance to pass a plutocrats’ tax cut, which in turn has led the Democrats to match them in claiming deficits don’t matter either (in the latter case, this is buttressed with a new flirtation with something called “Modern Monetary Theory,” a purportedly new theory whose only manifestation in practice ended in the Weimar Republic’s hyperinflation of the early 1920s, but lolz nothing matters, right?).
But here’s the thing: balanced budgets do matter. OK, nobody actually thinks we are heading back to the mid-90s when the country was actually flirting with bankruptcy (one dollar out of every three in the federal budget went to pay interest on the debt, at interest rates 400 to 500 basis points above the US rate to prevent capital flight). But many provinces do have serious long-term mismatches between their spending commitments and their sources of available revenue. According to the Parliamentary Budget Office, Alberta, Newfoundland and New Brunswick all have cost base/revenue mismatches equal to more than 2% of GDP (meaning it would take changes in budget of that magnitude to make the provinces solvent over the long run, given demographic trends); in Manitoba it is a stunning 4.5% of GDP (or about $1.25 billion). In these provinces, there is literally no hope of significant increases in core public funding for services – including higher education – until those budget numbers are put right.
Which is why it truly gets under my nose that most of bien-pensant Ontario has decided that every single cut made by the Ford government needs to be opposed on the grounds that it constitutes “austerity”. Austerity is not bad, per se. Austerity is a prime ingredient of Keynesian demand management (expansion in bad times needs to be offset by cuts in good times). In fact, what Ford is doing isn’t even necessarily austerity: the fiscal plan for this quinquennium involves annual increases in program spending of about 1% per year, which to most people’s eyes is not materially different than the 1.4% annual increases of the late McGuinty/early Wynne period of 2011-2016 (so if you think one was austerity the other was not, you either are working off double standards or you have an extremely finely honed sense of where the austerity/not austerity line lies).
But cuts aren’t in and of themselves bad. In the long run, balanced budgets are the basis of pretty much any kind of sound, long-term policy-making. Knee-jerk reactions to cuts lead to perpetual budget deficits which sound generous but in practice leads to terrible, stunted policy-making. BC, Quebec, and Germany are models everyone can and should follow.
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