BBC's Economics Editor gushes about Canada

BBC's Economics Editor Stephanie Flanders gushes about Canada:

The more you look at this country's numbers, the more you understand why Gordon Brown relegated Canada to “second tier” status in the diplomatic preparations for the Summit. It was the only bit of one-upmanship with the Canadians he could still win.

Next time the prime minister talks about every country being brought down by this crisis – or the chancellor suggests that everyone made the same mistakes – remember Canada. Nowhere is immune, but by most key measures, the Canadians are coming out of this crisis in a league of their own …

Didn't they pay a price for that boring banking – the distinct lack of securitisation and innovation? Well, it's true, Canada didn't have a nationwide house price bubble in the lead up to this crisis. And they didn't have the same kind of rise in personal debt. That's one reason the IMF used words like “resilient” and “well-placed” in its latest survey of the country's prospects.

You can see the results of this rather old-style approach in Canada's boringly consistent rate of growth. On average, between 2001 and 2007, its economy grew by 2.6%.

Across the ocean, the City was a hotbed of global financial innovation, and we were riding a heady stock market and housing boom on a sea of debt. The result? Average economic growth between 2001 and 2007 of, er, 2.6%…

Parliamentary Computer Network crashes

Parliamentarians, political staffers, and journalists were frozen out of the parliamentary computer network for about two hours this afternoon. No, it was not one of super-sized cyber-viruses, says Heather Bradley, the media relations person for the House of Commons. It was just a good, old-fashioned “hardware” problem. Bradley didn't have more details on the server or other piece of computer equipment that blew up.

In any event, the House of Commons IT staff fixed things up and systems were by and large back online as of about 1700.

HST coming to Saskatchewan? B.C.?

Finance Minister Jim Flaherty said today that “other provinces” are kicking the tires on the idea of blending the PST with the GST …

“I think this is very good economic policy,” Flaherty told reporters in Ottawa Monday. “This is a massive tax cut, a $5 billion tax cut for businesses in the province of Ontario and that means job creation and investment in the province of Ontario. So, this is very good economic policy over time.

“I’ve already heard from other provinces, now that Ontario has done this, that are not harmonized, saying let’s talk, we want to move in the same direction. Why? Because they know that that’s where the job creation will be and they don’t want to be left out.”

Alberta has no sales tax. PEI, Manitoba, Saskatchewan and BC are the only provinces without a harmonized tax. (Quebec’s tax is harmonized but is not in sync with federal tax regs.)

Interview with FOX News – remember them? — kicks off Harper''s busy week selling G20 plan

Prime Minister Stephen Harper will spend two days in the U.S. selling Canada's solution to the global fiscal crisis — fix broken banks and maintain free trade — ahead of crucial meetings with world leaders in London next week.

Beginning Sunday, Harper will travel to Washington, New York, London and Strasbourg, France, squeezing in several international media interviews, a meeting with Queen Elizabeth and a celebration of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization's 60th anniversary.

But the main purpose of his trip will be to convince Americans and, later, world leaders at the G20 summit in London that the global recession cannot end unless the financial system is fixed and that free trade is maintained.

“The London summit must focus on the economy and fixing the financial system,” said Kory Teneycke, the prime minister's director of communication.

“And we're really going to be championing the risks of creeping protectionism. That's a big deal.”

Harper will start selling that message Sunday in Washington with an interview with the anchor for the Sunday morning politics show on the U.S. Fox News network. The same network aired a show on March 17 that ridiculed and insulted the Canadian military . . . [Read the rest of the story]

Experts weigh in on record spending, record deficits of Ontario budget

A selection of links and commentary by experts reacting to Ontario's 2009-2010 Budget.

Go straight to: Conference Board of Canada | Royal Bank | BMO Nesbitt Burns | TD Bank | CIBC World Markets | Scotia Economics

The Conference Board of Canada

The coming year will prove to be a year of “firsts” for Ontario, the traditional engine of growth in the Canadian economy. For the first time since the inception of provincial trade records in 1981, Ontario will record a net trade deficit. This unfortunate development will trickle into the medium-term outlook for the province even as U.S. consumer sentiment revives. Ontario is also poised to go from “have” to “have not” status for the first time, and it will receive $347 million in federal equalization payments. Budget 2009 revealed the final “first” in the trifecta of the province’s woes: Ontario will run the largest provincial deficit in history—$14.1 billion—for the coming fiscal year! With an ambitious near-term spending plan and soft own-source revenue growth as a result of the global downturn, the province will not return to fiscal balance until 2015.

Despite this bad news, Ontario’s most recent budget does provide a silver lining to an otherwise dismal outlook in the form of timely stimulus. Many of the measures introduced in Budget 2009 are consistent with the Conference Board’s view on how to mitigate the effects of the current recession

The decision to convert Ontario’s retail sales tax to a harmonized value-added structure  in partnership with the federal government by July 1, 2010 is arguably the centrepiece of Budget 2009. In the long run, harmonization with the federal base will generate myriad economic efficiency benefits for businesses and consumers

Royal Bank [PDF]

The move to a harmonized rate should be applauded in terms of removing the inefficiencies of the current PST that applies to business inputs which raises production costs. One earlier reservation by the provincial government about the move to harmonization was that the GST had a much broader tax base that included items the McGuinty government preferred to have kept exempt. (On this front, the provincial government won some concessions retaining exemptions for such areas as children’s clothing and footware.) This wider tax base did provide the benefit of bringing in additional tax revenue to the province to the tune of $3.8B over fiscal 2010-11 and 2011-12

… Though [corporate and personal income] tax cuts are welcome and should help boost growth and productivity over the medium term, the delay until 2010 does little to counter the current economic weakness. A 2010 implementation is largely a reflection of the means to fund these cuts not starting to flow until then. Given the severity of the downturn, the argument could be made to accelerate the cuts and take the temporary hit to the deficit that would be reversed in 2010. However, currently proposed these tax changes have negligible net impact on the overall budget balance ($400 million) over fiscal 2009-10 and fiscal 2010-11.

BMO Nesbitt Burns [PDF] Robert Kavcic:

The Province of Ontario served up an aggressive budget against the worst economic backdrop since at least the early-90s, providing a mix of tax relief for individuals and businesses, infrastructure investment and still-strong growth in program spending. Overall, this budget addresses the near-term need for economic stimulus, while taking some steps to improve the province’s medium-term competitive position….

Ontario’s challenges, however, are not just cyclical as it has been shedding manufacturing jobs for about six years. Indeed, postrecession policy will still be challenged by the need to make Ontario an attractive and costeffective place to do business—this budget is a start.

TD Bank [PDF] Derek Burleton and Pascal Gauthier:

it has presented a broad
plan to eliminate the deficit over the next seven years.
But as importantly, today’s budget includes a series of bold
changes to bolster the province’s competitiveness beginning
in mid-2010, with sales tax harmonization and reductions in corporate income tax rates forming the package’s
centerpieces. The latter move was today’s most notable
surprise…

Whereas business inputs such as machinery and
equipment are taxed under the retail sales tax (RST), firms
will now get a tax credit as they do with the federal GST.
As such, business competitiveness will improve. Even
though a broadening in the tax base means that the household
sector will bear a larger sales tax burden, low and
middle-income households are being compensated with
a transitional one-time credit and a permanent credit.
Furthermore, some of the savings to business from removing
embedded sales taxes and streamlined tax administration
get passed onto consumers through lower
prices. Past experience of sales tax harmonization in
Québec and the Maritimes in 1997 suggests that overall
price level, or inflation as measured by the CPI, does not
increase as a result of harmonization. Instead, relative
prices of goods and services within a typical household’s
consumption basket are likely to change

Today’s budget marks a major step forward to raising
Ontario’s competitiveness. Undeniably, not everyone will
benefit from sales tax harmonization in the short term. And
many might question the government’s decision to allocate
billions of dollars of precious revenues to lower business
income taxes. However, over a longer term horizon, these actions should represent a win for businesses, households
and governments as new investment translates into higher
employment, income and government revenues.

CIBC World Markets – Avery Shenfeld and Meny Grauman

All told, the removal of the sales tax burden on nonfinancial
business and the rate reductions, together with
earlier enacted cuts at the federal and provincial levels,
will see the marginal effective tax on new investment fall
from 32.8% to only 18.9% after July 1, 2010 (Chart 3),
and to 17.3% by 2013. The business sector will also
benefit from pension reforms that will allow definedbenefit
plan sponsors to spread out solvency payments
over a longer period, a pressing need given the recently
poor performance of capital market investments…

Scotia Economics: Mary Webb

In the extremely competitive environment anticipated as an economic recovery takes hold, this Budget focuses
on elevating Ontario’s competitiveness. Near-term, an essential part of this strategy is the $33.6 billion of
infrastructure spending anticipated over FY10 and FY11, following investments of more than $18 billion during
the prior two years. Mirroring Ottawa’s guidelines, the provincial funds must be spent in the next two years, and
the projects must reflect additional investments that otherwise would not have occurred.

First steps in the Province’s Poverty Reduction Strategy include
raising the maximum annual payment per child under the Ontario Child
Benefit from $600 to $1,100 as of July 2009, two years ahead of schedule.
A 2% increase for the benefits under the Ontario Works and the Ontario
Disability Support Program and the comfort allowance for long-term care
residents is proposed for FY10. For the repair and energy retrofits for social
housing units, more than $700 million is allocated over the next two years,
with an additional $360 million for new affordable units for low-income
seniors and individuals with disabilities.

Ottawa begins move to accrual accounting. No, really, this is important!

Treasury Board President Vic Toews just tabled 95 “Reports on Plans and Priorities”, known around Ottawa as RPPs. These are important documents for reporters and anyone interested in keeping a close eye on government because, as Toews says in his press release, they “are forward looking documents that provide expenditure plans over a 3 year period.”

Now bear with me for a moment and let me explain why this year's RPPs are extra-special.

For the first time, the government is moving ahead on a plan to report its financial position using “accrual accounting”. The government does a good job, I think, explaining what this means:

Accrual accounting refers to a method of accounting that records transactions to reflect revenue in the period in which it is earned and the consumption or use of goods and services rather than when cash is received or paid as it is in accounting on a cash basis.

One of the main benefits of accrual accounting is that it recognizes the life-cycle costs associated with assets.

For example, a department purchases a fleet of trucks for $1.2 million. The trucks have a useful service life of six years. Under the cash method, the full $1.2 million would be reported as expenditure in the first year, and nothing in the subsequent five years. However, under the accrual method, the accounts would record the same purchase much differently. The $1.2 million would be reported as an asset in the first year and, for each of the six years the trucks are in service, $200,000 in expense would be reported to reflect the use of the trucks.

Accrual information clearly presents a very different—but more accurate—picture of the organization's financial results and situation.

By providing RPP financial information on an accrual basis, parliamentarians are better able to compare departmental plans and priorities with the information in the Government's budget, in end-of-year results outlined in the Government's financial statements in Public Accounts and in Departmental Performance Reports, all of which are also presented on an accrual basis.

All RPPs will include financial information on accrual basis in two years.

It is important for parliamentarians—and by extension all Canadians—to understand what the government is doing, why it is doing it, and what results are being achieved. That is why the Government tables in Parliament a number of key documents that explain the Government's objectives and then reports on progress against those stated aims. This is known as the Estimates process.

RPPs are part III of the Estimates process. They provide further details on the information provided through the Main Estimates. Once the fiscal year is over, Departmental Performance Reports provide individual department and agency accounts of accomplishments against plans and expected results set out in their RPPs. These are normally tabled in the fall.

The government doesn't say this but let me say it: This is how most of the world accounts for things.

There has been a resistance at the federal government level to move to this kind of accounting for this reason: Governments in our parliamentary system can only spend if MPs in the House of Commons vote for that spending. “… [accrual accounting] does provide more information to us,” former Conservative MP John Williams once said — and Williams was, by trade, an accountant — “but remember we vote money on an annual basis. We don't vote money on an annual basis and if you have some left over you can carry it around and spent it another time.”

So what does that mean to everyday Canadians?

Well, let's go back to the example of the trucks. The way it works now is the government must spend and acount for the $1.2 million for trucks right now, this year. Government money only comes from one place — you and me. That means taxpayers in the current year have to come up with the full cost of those trucks right now even though taxpayers in future years will clearly enjoy the benefits — benefits that they don't have to pay for. Now, if the government goes into deficit to pay for those trucks, then taxpayers of future years get to pay for those trucks — plus interest! Taxpayers don't like deficits and so governments will tend to avoid buying the trucks and that, in turn, can have service consequences.

Now if the governnment could apply accrual accounting, then taxpayers today could acquire the trucks, the trucks show up as a government asset on the books, and taxpayers this year get “charged” $200,000″ for their use. Taxpayers next year, who are also enjoying the benefit of the trucks, also get charged $200,000, which must come from their taxes, and so on until the trucks have no asset value left. That, many think, is a more fair way for governments to acquire and pay for public goods which benefit many generations of taxpayers.

I quoted John Williams a minute ago and now I can tell you the context of the discussion he was having.

Public Works and Government Services Canada wanted to build a new office building for civil servants. Public Works looked at all the options so far as building and owning a new building or leasing a new building. PWGSC real estate managers concluded the best long-term course of action for taxpayers would be to build a new building rather than sign a lease agreement. But the government of the day was going to proceed with the leasing arrangement. Why? Building a new building would cost taxpayers now, say, $50 million and there was not $50 million in the current year's budget for such a big one-time expense. A 20-year lease for the same building would be about $5 millino a year and, yes, there was room in the budget for a $5 million expense. But of course, over 20 years, the government, had it owned the building, would have paid $50-million and then still had an asset with some value. Instead, over 20 years, it will pay $100 million in rent and have no asset to show for it at the end of that period.

So why don't we change the way Parliament does things? You'll love this answer: Because that would require changing the Constitution and that requires the agreement of the Provinces and, voila, we are into protracted and likely unsuccessful Constitutional negotiations.

Until that time, the government is going to try to, essentially, maintain two sets of books — the new accrual accounting and the old-fashioned parliamentary cash accounting. Accrual accounting's advocates hope that in showing how well accrual accounting can work and how policy decisions could be improved, perhaps the impetus will build for that constitutional change.

Parliament's budget officer: It's worse — a lot worse — than gov't would have you believe

Parliament's independent budget watchdog says the economy is in much worse shape [pdf] than Finance Minister Jim Flaherty predicted just weeks ago when he tabled the 2009 federal budget.

Parliamentary Budget Officer Kevin Page told the House of Commons finance committee that the current recession will be “sharper” [pdf] than the one Flaherty spoke of when he tabled the budget on Jan. 27 and that means deficits that will be deeper and thousands more Canadians are likely to lose their jobs.

He also said Canada's economy has slowed more rapidly than during the recessions of the 1980s and 1990s.

“We think what we're seeing now is absolutely historic in terms of quarter-to-quarter declines,” Page told the finance committee Wednesday . . . [Read the rest of the story]

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PM's Spring Break

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Prime Minister Stephen Harper's Spring Break will consist of two days in Jamaica. The PMO announced this evening that Harper will visit Jamaica for two days in April — April 19-20.

On Monday, Prime Minister Stephen Harper met with the Honourable Dr. Kenneth Baugh, Jamaica’s Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Foreign Affairs and Foreign Trade. It was Baugh's first official visit to Canada. (The PMO provided the photo at left of Harper's and Baugh's meeting)

“The visit will give Canada the opportunity to strengthen its partnership with Jamaica, one that is based on important political, commercial, and personal links. It will also reaffirm Canada's special relationship with the Caribbean,” the PMO said in a note to reporters announcing the visit.

The Jamaica visit will come right after Harper's attendance at the annual Summit of the Americas, April 17-19, in Trinidad and Tobago.

So that's the PM's spring break – four or five days in Caribbean almost all of which he'll spend in meetings.

Next Tuesday, incidentally, Harper jets to London, England for the G20 summit. The day after that wraps up, Harper heads to the NATO Heads of State meeting in Strasbourg, France, before returning to Canada on April 4.

The Jamaica trip is up after that.

(Of course, Ottawa, Jamaica, London, Strasbourg– the weather in any of those places is better than what Calgary went through this weekend.)   

EDC touts its financing work, money flows to auto makers

Export Development Canada (EDC) is a federal Crown corporation that helps Canadian exporters by lending them money or guaranteeing loans they might get from other financial institutions. The EDC and its domestic equivalent — the Business Development Bank of Canada (BDC) — are to play a significant role in the federal government's economic stimulus plan. These are, essentially, government-owned banks. So if regular banks and other non-bank lenders are giving money to businesses that need to invest and grow, then the pressure is on the government's banks to step in.

EDC and BDC, though, are self-financing Crown corporations. They can't just throw money at bad loans and watch their default rate skyrocket. And they say their staffs are working as fast as possible to get some new money given to them by Ottawa out the door and into the hands of entrepreneurs.

Consider this appeareance by Jean-René Halde, the CEO of the BDC, before the House of Commons Finance Committee. Haldé came under fire from MPs several times for, in their view, not springing into action to help ailing manufacturers. Consider this exchange with Liberal MP Massimo Pacetti. Pacetti concern was typical of complaints many MPs are getting. Note also Halde's reply about the risk profile of their typical client:

Pacetti: I have a constituent in the textile business who came in. They have been suffering for a number of years, but now things have finally turned around in their area. They're one of the few survivors. They're looking for additional financing. They have some firm orders because their facilities are in close proximity to the U.S. market. Here we have an example of a $100,000 loan where fees of $8,911 are being charged on an amount that was outstanding. It came to about $40,000.

   I understand it's in special accounts, but there seems to be a problem. You are pretty well the lender of last resort, but you are treating people like you are a bank. I understand that you have to make money, but there doesn't seem to be a mechanism where people can come to the bank and say they want their case to be reviewed or have a second person look at it.

   Am I missing something? If the business sector doesn't have the confidence that they can do business with you on the second round of these additional moneys to be lent through the business credit availability program, how am I going to feel at ease that you will be able to get that money out, not only to the right people, but efficiently and at a reduced cost?

Halde:  Thank you. Let me try to address your question. First, we do price for risk. Our average client, by Standard and Poor's [credit rating], might be a B-; our best client would probably be a B+, and some of them would be CCC. We're dealing with a risky clientele, and basically we price for risk. At the end of that process, we're making a very minimal return on equity with that.

As I listened to Halde's testimony that day, I was struck by the fact, even on the House of Commons Finance Committee, there wasn't a very clear understanding what EDC and BDC do and what their operating parameters are. In other words, EDC and BDC have a PR problem. They need to be more visible; to tell Canadians (and MPs) what they're doing.

Well, lo and behold, the EDC at least is now putting out press releases calling attention to its role in helping Canadian manufacturers:

Here's the first grafs from a release this morning — note how the EDC is trumpeting new powers it received as a result of the budget. The business at hand here, New Flyer, is a bus manufacturer:

Export Development Canada (EDC) today announced that it has committed up to USD 40 million to participate in a USD 180 million dollar renewal of a syndicated facility for New Flyer Industries Inc. (New Flyer).

The transaction marks EDC’s first financing commitment under its new enhanced mandate to support domestic trade to help increase access to credit for Canadian companies. EDC’s new domestic powers came into effect on Thursday, March 12, 2009, with the passing of Bill C-10 by Parliament.

“EDC’s participation in this facility renewal for New Flyer is exactly what our new domestic powers were intended to accomplish,” said Eric Siegel, President and CEO of EDC. “This facility shows how EDC can complement the private sector to enhance capacity for domestic transactions that are creditworthy and supported by a viable business model, but for which companies are having a difficult time finding credit.”

And here's some more: