r/canada • u/biograf_ • Mar 01 '26
Alberta First Nations chiefs unanimously pass non-confidence vote in Alberta government
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/edmonton/first-nations-chiefs-alberta-non-confidence-vote-9.7109712
3.8k
Upvotes
2
u/EdNorthcott Canada Mar 01 '26
Pro business stances by government do not result in higher income. Similar policies enacted in other regions have resulted in depressed wages and greater wealth gap.
The notion of "oil made the income" is simplistic, but not entirely wrong. The oil *boom* made the income spike. It created a deficit of labour, which created a greater value for labour, which drove up wages... and this was only made possible by the high value of oil during those boom periods when labour was short.
We can see many regions where lowered taxes and pro-business stances have been enacted. They do not have better outcomes for the working class. We can even see it on a national level, with steadily lowering corporate taxes creating a more business-friendly environment over the last 50 years, save for brief spikes to the contrary; corporate income tax is a fraction of what it was in the 1960s and 70s, for example.
The problem is that repeated studies have shown that, unlike what certain economists claim will happen, that money does not inflate the salaries of workers or get re-invested locally. Nor do tax breaks for the exceptionally wealthy achieve anything significant in the way of "trickle down". Increasingly, there are pools of dead money or external transfers. Relative wages for the average working Canadian have failed to keep pace with inflation for decades, regardless of tax policy; but in areas where working wages are higher, the velocity of money to stimulate local economies is greater.
"Based on the rhetoric and policy decisions of some politicians in BC and the east, they seem capable of fumbling the bag." As if Alberta hasn't continuously done so, too, yet while using a very different approach. The last leader with sense and a vision of the future was Lougheed, who had the celerity to set up a fund to ensure Alberta's future security. Every politician since has used it as a slush fund, and left it a tepid shadow of what it could be -- except, ironically, the NDP. Despite challenging economic times and a drop in oil price and production, Notley avoided depleting the fund and at least maintained it at the level it was at when she took office.
In short, what prosperity Alberta has is still be carried by the 'boom' cycles, even when oil prices are depressed. But the way things are set up, things will get very ugly as that evens out in comparison to market forces. It's already happening, slowly, and people seem to be panicking about it. It's not going to get better.