Monday, August 26, 2013

No Economic Geniuses



Scott Clark and Peter Devries write that the stated focus of Jim Flaherty's seventh annual "national policy retreat" was  job creation and economic growth. The Harper government likes to repeat that those two objectives are -- and always have been -- its reasons for being.

But all that talk has not yielded much of either:

The economy has been in a growth decline since 2010 — job creation has been dismal. In 2009, real GDP declined by 2.9 per cent and then bounced back in 2010 to 3.3 percent. Since then, growth as been decelerating: to 2.4 per cent in 2011, to 1.7 per cent in 2012 and to a forecast of roughly 1.6 per cent in 2013.

Growth is forecast to increase in 2014 to around 2.5 per cent — but economists have been forecasting a turnaround for the past three years and it still hasn’t happened. Why should it happen in 2014 when the global economy remains so weak?

Mr. Harper had a hand in weakening the world economy.  Martin Wolf recently wrote in The New York Review of Books:

Austerity came to Europe in the first half of 2010, with the Greek crisis, the coalition government in the UK, and above all, in June of that year, the Toronto summit of the group of twenty leading countries. This meeting prematurely reversed the successful stimulus launched at the previous summits and declared, roundly, that “advanced economies have committed to fiscal plans that will at least halve deficits by 2013.”

That was the summit Flaherty's boss, Stephen Harper, hosted. He pushed hard for his confreres to cut their deficits:

It was an attempt prematurely and unwisely made. The cuts in these structural deficits, a mix of tax increases and government spending cuts between 2010 and 2013, will be around 11.8 percent of potential GDP in Greece, 6.1 percent in Portugal, 3.5 percent in Spain, and 3.4 percent in Italy. One might argue that these countries have had little choice. But the UK did, yet its cut in the structural deficit over these three years will be 4.3 percent of GDP.

Yet Mr. Harper and Mr. Flaherty continue to trumpet their job creation record:

In promoting its job creation record, the government makes the claim that the economy has recovered all the jobs lost during the recession. Not bad when compared to some other G-7 counties, but certainly not good enough for Canadians. In February 2008, the unemployment rate hit a low of 5.9 per cent; in July 2013 it was 7.2 per cent. In February 2008, the labour force participation rate hit a high of 67.8 per cent; in July of 2013 it had fallen to 66.5 per cent — clearly indicating that many Canadians had simply withdrawn from the job market because of a lack of opportunities.

In other words, the “real” unemployment rate — including these discouraged workers — is much higher than 7.2 per cent. In February 2008, the ratio of persons employed, aged 15 and over, to the Canadian population aged 15 and over (the ‘employment ratio’), reached a high of 63.8 per cent. By July 2013 it had fallen to 61.7 per cent. The economy simply wasn’t growing fast enough to create enough jobs for a growing adult population.

The truth is that Mr. Harper's and Mr, Flaherty's economic record is dismal. It is true that Canadian banks are in much better shape than many others. But that was the work of the previous Martin government.

No, despite their claims to the contrary, Mr. Flaherty and Mr. Harper are no economic geniuses.




6 comments:

bcwaterboy said...

Dismal indeed Owen, the job of the opposition and the media now is to permanently take the jobs-and-growing-the-economy tag line away from harper. He's successfully used it ever since he didn't see the 08 meltdown coming.

Owen Gray said...

The evidence is in, waterboy. The media shouldn't allow either of them to advertise what is patently untrue.

Lorne said...

There is an interesting piece by The Star's Carol Goar in today's edition, Owen, that addresses the theme of dishonesty when it comes to Canada's economy. specifically, she looks at the feds' claim that their is a skills' shortage in Canada, evidence for which economist Don Drummond says is non-existent. It is, in fact,a jobs' shortage. The emperor has no clothes.

Owen Gray said...

Thanks for the tip, Lorne. The Harperite capacity to ignore evidence is mind boggling.

Anonymous said...

The Harperites will do *anything* in the service of their corporate masters, Owen, including destroying the country.

Owen Gray said...

I agree, Anon. They put profits first and sell the line that profits create jobs.

The truth is that cutting costs improves profits -- and that means cutting labour costs improves bottom lines.

The Harperites have never been devoted to job creation.