Massive government spending in Atlantic Canada—well above even Swedish levels—has landed the four Atlantic provinces at the bottom of economic freedom rankings among the 10 provinces and 50 U.S. states, according to the new Economic Freedom of North America report.
Newfoundland and Labrador and Prince Edward Island are tied at the bottom, just below Nova Scotia (58th) and New Brunswick (57th).
In 2019, government spending equaled a remarkable 55 per cent of the Atlantic economy. By comparison, Swedish government spending equaled 50 per cent of Sweden’s economy. The average across Canada was much lower—around 40 per cent, close to the OECD average.
Among other factors, the economic freedom index measures regulatory restrictions on free exchange and contracting, the level of taxes (in other words, the amount of property the government expropriates through taxation) and the extent of government spending.
Sensible regulation and reasonable taxes may seem obvious components of economic freedom but government spending is also important, whether the money falls from heaven or is borrowed from the next generation or subsidized by taxpayers outside Atlantic Canada.
High government spending reduces the space for free exchange. It creates dependence and a politicized economy as government, and not the marketplace, becomes an ever more important business customer, weakening competitiveness with the rest of the world. Atlantic Canada does poorly in regulation and taxation. However, the magnitude of government spending in the region is the biggest negative.
Not only does big spending suppress business competitiveness, it damages the Atlantic labour market. A regionally-rich employment insurance system pays many workers every year not to work for most of the year, increases business costs of employing workers, and frustrates many the ability of many businesses to hire year-round workers and create sustainable private-sector jobs.
Sweden compensates for its big government with an extremely open free-market economy and business-friendly laws and regulations, efficiently and quickly administered. Sweden, like Norway and Denmark, sits at the top 10 of the World Bank’s Ease of Doing Business report. Canada is 23rd. That report’s data are only available nationally for Canada, but businesses in Atlantic Canada seldom praise governments for having world-class business friendliness and efficiency.
Sweden has virtually zero corruption. Transparency International ranks Sweden as the fourth-least corrupt country in the world (Denmark is 1st and Norway is 7th). Canada is 12th. Spending in Sweden is largely depoliticized, something that would be difficult to argue in Atlantic Canada, where every election politicians travel their province promising goodies.
Sweden’s big government weakens growth, but Sweden has significant advantages in government efficiency and transparency.
Atlantic Canada faces a political vulnerability. Much of the money governments spend in Atlantic Canada comes from Canadians outside the region due to the structure of fiscal federalism, which creates large unbalanced flows of money between provinces. Federal spending between 2007 to 2019 in Atlantic Canada equaled $390.7 billion compared to revenue of $209.3 billion, a net inflow $181.4 billion of federal money. (Statistics Canada’s current government fiscal series is limited to the 2007 to 2019 period.)
Opposition to fiscal federalism is increasing in Alberta and even Ontario. Between 2007 and 2019, Albertans contributed $570.4 billion in revenue to the federal government but Ottawa spent only $313.1 billion in Alberta, for a net outflow of $257.3 billion.
Alberta’s 2020 budget and the newly-created Fairness Alberta demand fiscal reform. In Ontario, fiscal federalism is facing pushback from organizations such as the Institute for Competitiveness and Prosperity, Ontario 360 and the Ontario Chamber of Commerce. Fiscal federalism faces further political and economic problems in the post-COVID world, with government budget deficits at all levels soaring.
Atlantic Canada must recover from its growth-suppressing addiction to big government if it aspires to catch up with the rest of Canada economically and provide opportunity for young Atlantic Canadians.
Not only would reducing government spending in Atlantic Canada power economic growth in the long-term, it may be unavoidable. Without the billions Ottawa ships to the region, the current level of spending is unsustainable. Governments in the region should not just prepare for changes to fiscal federalism, but welcome them.
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Atlantic provinces addiction to big government suppresses economic growth
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Massive government spending in Atlantic Canada—well above even Swedish levels—has landed the four Atlantic provinces at the bottom of economic freedom rankings among the 10 provinces and 50 U.S. states, according to the new Economic Freedom of North America report.
Newfoundland and Labrador and Prince Edward Island are tied at the bottom, just below Nova Scotia (58th) and New Brunswick (57th).
In 2019, government spending equaled a remarkable 55 per cent of the Atlantic economy. By comparison, Swedish government spending equaled 50 per cent of Sweden’s economy. The average across Canada was much lower—around 40 per cent, close to the OECD average.
Among other factors, the economic freedom index measures regulatory restrictions on free exchange and contracting, the level of taxes (in other words, the amount of property the government expropriates through taxation) and the extent of government spending.
Sensible regulation and reasonable taxes may seem obvious components of economic freedom but government spending is also important, whether the money falls from heaven or is borrowed from the next generation or subsidized by taxpayers outside Atlantic Canada.
High government spending reduces the space for free exchange. It creates dependence and a politicized economy as government, and not the marketplace, becomes an ever more important business customer, weakening competitiveness with the rest of the world. Atlantic Canada does poorly in regulation and taxation. However, the magnitude of government spending in the region is the biggest negative.
Not only does big spending suppress business competitiveness, it damages the Atlantic labour market. A regionally-rich employment insurance system pays many workers every year not to work for most of the year, increases business costs of employing workers, and frustrates many the ability of many businesses to hire year-round workers and create sustainable private-sector jobs.
Sweden compensates for its big government with an extremely open free-market economy and business-friendly laws and regulations, efficiently and quickly administered. Sweden, like Norway and Denmark, sits at the top 10 of the World Bank’s Ease of Doing Business report. Canada is 23rd. That report’s data are only available nationally for Canada, but businesses in Atlantic Canada seldom praise governments for having world-class business friendliness and efficiency.
Sweden has virtually zero corruption. Transparency International ranks Sweden as the fourth-least corrupt country in the world (Denmark is 1st and Norway is 7th). Canada is 12th. Spending in Sweden is largely depoliticized, something that would be difficult to argue in Atlantic Canada, where every election politicians travel their province promising goodies.
Sweden’s big government weakens growth, but Sweden has significant advantages in government efficiency and transparency.
Atlantic Canada faces a political vulnerability. Much of the money governments spend in Atlantic Canada comes from Canadians outside the region due to the structure of fiscal federalism, which creates large unbalanced flows of money between provinces. Federal spending between 2007 to 2019 in Atlantic Canada equaled $390.7 billion compared to revenue of $209.3 billion, a net inflow $181.4 billion of federal money. (Statistics Canada’s current government fiscal series is limited to the 2007 to 2019 period.)
Opposition to fiscal federalism is increasing in Alberta and even Ontario. Between 2007 and 2019, Albertans contributed $570.4 billion in revenue to the federal government but Ottawa spent only $313.1 billion in Alberta, for a net outflow of $257.3 billion.
Alberta’s 2020 budget and the newly-created Fairness Alberta demand fiscal reform. In Ontario, fiscal federalism is facing pushback from organizations such as the Institute for Competitiveness and Prosperity, Ontario 360 and the Ontario Chamber of Commerce. Fiscal federalism faces further political and economic problems in the post-COVID world, with government budget deficits at all levels soaring.
Atlantic Canada must recover from its growth-suppressing addiction to big government if it aspires to catch up with the rest of Canada economically and provide opportunity for young Atlantic Canadians.
Not only would reducing government spending in Atlantic Canada power economic growth in the long-term, it may be unavoidable. Without the billions Ottawa ships to the region, the current level of spending is unsustainable. Governments in the region should not just prepare for changes to fiscal federalism, but welcome them.
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Fred McMahon
Resident Fellow, Dr. Michael A. Walker Chair in Economic Freedom
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