Thank you, Mr. Chair.
First, my disclosures—I don't belong to any political party or donate money to any political party. Second, I hold no stocks or bonds or investments other than my personal home, and thus, I have no conflicts of interest.
Three months ago, I completed a major strategic analysis of Canada Post, which was an update to my 2015 Macdonald-Laurier Institute study of Canada Post. I titled it, “The Tipping Point Has Arrived”.
In researching and preparing for my presentation today to your august committee, it dawned on me that the existential problems facing Canada Post are a microcosm of the profound existential problems facing Canada today. Restated, the tipping point has arrived for Canada as well. Carolyn Rogers at the Bank of Canada was absolutely correct. It's time to break the glass—but what glass?
I've lived in Ottawa all my life. It's been a deeply held belief by a significant number of decision-makers in Ottawa, sometimes characterized as the Laurentian elites, that Canada can and should tax, subsidize, protect and print our way to prosperity. Throughout the 35 years in my classes at the university and in media interviews, I've characterized this vision as the Argentine model in honour of Juan and Isabel Perón, who were able to drive Argentina, one of the wealthiest countries in the world in 1918 on a per person income basis, to the poverty-stricken country of today with approximately $13,000 per person per year, in steep economic decline.
Before I review the most critical trend metrics in Canada today, and just in case, before any of my analysis is dismissed as “far right wing rhetoric”, it must be disclosed that my analysis is fundamentally very similar to the published outlooks of David Dodge, former governor of the Bank of Canada; speeches by former Liberal deputy prime minister John Manley; the report of the Coalition for a Better Future, co-chaired by former Liberal deputy prime minister Anne McLellan; statements by former Liberal B.C. premier, Christy Clark; and the research of the C.D. Howe Institute.
What is the problem?
As Professor Tombe of the University of Calgary, in his very recent stunning analysis, found, “A longer historical perspective reveals a striking reality: the gap between the Canadian and American economies has now reached its widest point in nearly a century.” Put another way, real GDP per capita in the United States is now 43% higher than in Canada. Only nine years ago, per Professor Tombe, the gap was only 23%. In nine years, we've almost doubled the gap between us and the Americans on a per person basis, even though Canada and the U.S. occupy the same North American continent, the same time zones, a similar English common law legal system, similar levels of education, a similar democratic system and a common free trade agreement.
How can this be?
In a single word, it's policy. For example, a recent C.D. Howe study found that capital available per Canadian worker has been shrinking since 2015. I keep saying this in my media interviews because people's eyes glaze over when they hear the word “capital”. Capital is the jobs and the factories of tomorrow. If we don't have capital, we're not going to have those good jobs of tomorrow. Worse, the gap between investment per worker in Canada versus the other OECD high-income countries is widening. Today, Canadian workers only receive 66 cents of new capital for every dollar their OECD counterparts receive and a mere 55 cents per dollar compared to U.S. workers.
Last month, Professor Mintz at University of Calgary found that, overall, the increase in the capital gains tax rate at both the corporate and personal levels is expected to discourage business investment in employment. He found that the increase in the capital gains tax will reduce Canada's GDP by $90 billion, real per capita GDP by 3%, its capital stock by $127 billion and employment by 400,000-plus workers. This is stunning. We are effectively telling our investor class, “Don't invest in Canada; go invest in the United States to make them even wealthier.”
As Robert Asselin, a former senior adviser to former prime ministers Chrétien and Martin, stated, “Canadians will not be able to sustain their living standards—including...social programs—if the country doesn’t change course.”
At this point, it's necessary to expose an argument I've heard for years upon years. It's a fallacious assumption of those who say, look, we're doing something not that different from the European Union, so it can't be all that bad.
However, Mario Draghi, the brilliant former ECB governor and the former prime minister of Italy, just released his very massive analysis of the existential failings of European Union policies. They have collapsing competitiveness; they have very profound problems.
For example, in 2000, the European Union GDP was equal to—the same size as—the United States GDP. Today, 24 years later, the European Union is 40% smaller than the United States. That's just astonishing. The Italian prime minister said, “America innovates, China replicates, Europe regulates.” In Canada's situation, I believe empirically, if you put the numbers side by side, that we are worse off than the EU.
What is to be done? We must explicitly repudiate the failed economic vision that I've been describing: the centralized, top-down, state-directed, command and control, relying on taxation, subsidies and protectionism, the EU and the Argentine model, and the assumption that it's superior to decentralized, market-driven, privately funded and privately determined economic decision-making—for things like battery plants—concerning capital and competition. This is the economic philosophy that underlies the largest, most dynamic, most innovative, most productive economy on planet earth: the United States.
Members of Parliament, it's not too late to end Canada's holiday from economic history.
Thank you.