Friday, February 20, 2009

Jane Sterk: It is time for a responsible government in B.C.

Georgia Straight ~ February 20, 2009

By Jane Sterk

The meltdown in the financial sector has sparked a dramatic shift in public policy. Deregulation and market reliance has given way to a significant increase in economic interventionism. Government spending is now all the rage. It hardly seems to matter how it is being spent, as long as it is being spent. Even deficit spending is now kindly referred to as “a stimulus package”.

The Gordon Campbell Liberals have also caught the spending fever. The party that previously called for prudent fiscal management and opposed deficit spending has changed its tune.

But why this shift? Why these panicked pendulum politics? And, more importantly, isn’t there a better way forward? Do we have another option?

The first thing to remember is that this budget is an election budget. What this means, to put it bluntly, is that it has been engineered from top to bottom in order to bring in more votes for the Liberal party come election-time this May. A couple things follow from this.

First, Finance Minister Colin Hansen has been putting forward a rosy outlook for British Columbia’s economy. This optimism seems to be somewhat unwarranted. It has been estimated that 2009/2010 income-tax revenue will be $650 million less than predicted and social-service revenue $350 million less. That alone takes the deficit to $1.2 billion.

There are some real concerns regarding our economy, and it is safe to say that, after the election, the government will be telling a very different story. Not long ago we saw this same political move at the federal level when the Conservative government rapidly shifted from a position of wild optimism to one of modest realism after the election.

Second, this budget is more rooted in reactionary partisan politics than in measures that will address the deep structural concerns within our economy. This Liberal government has jumped on the deficit bandwagon with little attention to where it is headed. There is little in this budget to indicate that the Liberals are serious about taking the steps needed to move us into a 21st-century economy that is sustainable and prosperous.

There is a better way.

There is a better way of doing politics and the Green party is offering a better plan for B.C. This plan offers us a new and better approach to deal with our economic downturn—one that moves beyond the “either/or” choice of either big-government centralized control or radically privatized decentralization. We Greens believe that both government and the nongovernmental sector have important roles to play in ensuring long-term prosperity in B.C. The challenge is to find the appropriate balance between the two.

I believe the core principles in this balance may with summed up with three R’s—responsible, respectful, and representative government actions.

Responsible: Government spending needs to be part of a long-term plan that is designed to ensure lasting prosperity. We need a budget that will make investments in programs that expand future technologies and jobs within B.C. This includes district-level solar, wind, and geothermal energy farms and well as education and technological research. These innovations will stimulate the economy, bring high paying jobs to the province, and keep intellectual capital in B.C.

Respectful: A respectful provincial government works in close cooperation with municipalities to facilitate healthy and robust economic development at the local level. This means ensuring predictable revenue flows are available to municipal governments through fewer restrictions on municipal taxation, not more. It means providing more grants to local governments with appropriate oversight mechanisms that ensure fiscal prudence across the board.

Representative: We need to move to the BC-STV electoral system of proportional representation. One of the best ways to get past the reactionary and divisive swings in B.C. politics is to ensure the political views of the population are accurately represented in the legislature.

The Green party’s plan for B.C. offers us an opportunity to find a more efficient, equitable, and stable balance. By choosing a steady path forward in this time of economic downturn—by electing Greens to the legislature—we can ensure a better future for B.C.

Jane Sterk is the leader of the Green Party of B.C.

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