Why the BC Liberal economic record is actually worse than the NDP’s in 90’s

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Many people are ready for a change in Victoria. Christy Clark is one of the least popular candidates for premier in BC history and, after 16 years of scandal-filled rule, her Liberal Party has tried British Columbians’ patience to the extreme. Yet every day on social media, I run across a familiar refrain: “Better than going back to the NDP’s lost decade.” Clearly, that narrative is so deeply embedded that it threatens to keep the NDP out of government yet again.

But memory, science now teaches us, is unreliable. It can play tricks on us. In order to make an informed decision on May 9, voters need to know the hard facts about BC’s economic history – a straight up comparison between the two credible options in this election. A serious examination of the best available data on key metrics reveals that British Columbians have far more to fear from another four years of the Christy Clark Liberals running our economy than they do taking a chance on John Horgan and the NDP.

Debt Bomb

For a government that claims to “balance budgets”, it’s astounding to consider how much debt the Liberals have racked up on our behalf. While the NDP grew the provincial debt by roughly $17 Billion over their decade in power, the Liberals had added $33 Billion by the end of the last fiscal year. But that’s just the tip of the iceberg. They’ve saddled BC Hydro with $24 Billion in debt and “deferrals”, plus another $58 Billion in unnecessary, sweetheart private power contracts, on which we lose over a billion dollars every year. This also explains the almost doubling of your power bills during their reign. And that’s before the unnecessary Site C Dam, which won’t be paid off until at least 2094! Here’s what UBC’s Dr. Karen Bakker had to say on the subject after she and a team of researchers published their damning report on Site C’s economics:

[quote]Site C will be 100 per cent surplus when it’s finished in 2024. That surplus energy will have to be sold, will have to be exported, from the province and B.C. Hydro’s own numbers show that those exports will occur at a high loss. Our figures show that loss will be about $800 million and could be as high as $2 billion.[/quote]

That’s just if the Liberal Government manages to keep to its $9 Billion budget for the project – hard to conceive of when their top 5 capital projects to date have doubled in cost, going over budget by a whopping $3.3 Billion (compare that with the NDP’s fast ferries, which went over by $250 million).

Courtesy of Norm Farrell/In-sights

All this fiscal mismanagement has taken a huge toll. Add up our official provincial debt and liabilities ($84.3 Billion, according to the Comptroller General), then factor in hidden taxpayer obligations from private contracts for electricity and infrastructure building ($101 Billion, according to the Auditor General) and you get $185.7 Billion of real debt for BCup from $39 Billion when the Liberals took over from the NDP. That’s about $40,000 for every man, woman and child in the province – double the per capita debt of the next closest province, Ontario, even when you factor in their own “additional taxpayer obligations”.

The BC Liberals also sold off one strategically vital and financially healthy crown corporation, BC Rail, and ran two others – ICBC and Hydro – into the ground, taking half billion to a billion dollar annual profits and turning them into equally large deficits.

The inputs into BC’s tax coffers are declining in other places as well. For instance, huge royalty giveaways to the gas sector have sucked billions out of our provincial revenues. As renowned geologist and shale gas expert David Hughes explains, “[BC’s gas] production has doubled since 2005 whereas revenue is down 87%”. The same thing can be said for stumpage fees from logging, which have sunk to pathetic levels over the past decade.

Given all this, the only way the Liberals can lay any claim to “balanced budgets” is by shunting debt into other accounts and onto the backs of ratepayers and crown corporations, while cutting services to the public. The effects of these debts may not be immediately visible – but they are guaranteed to be borne by young British Columbians and future generations for decades to come. BC’s credit rating is now under threat due to BC Hydro’s shaky position, which means servicing that growing debt is going to become even more costly going forward.

Jobs, Jobs, Jobs

One of the most telling moments during the televised leaders’ debate was this exchange between moderator Jennifer Burke and Christy Clark:

Clark went on to her mantra that she’s created 226,000 jobs. Even if it were true that British Columbians don’t care about anything else, or that jobs are a panacea for all BC’s socioeconomic ills, how true is her claim that NDP were so much worse for jobs than her government is?

The NDP inherited a high unemployment rate of 10% from the Socreds and saw that decline fairly steadily to 7.2 % in 2000 (BC’s lowest rate since the early 80’s) – the last full year before they left office. Things got worse early on under the Campbell Liberals, but that can be partly attributed to the tech bust and other factors beyond their control.

Throughout Christy Clark’s tenure, BC’s unemployment rate has come down from 7.5% to around 6% today – on the surface, marginally better than then NDP in the late 90’s. But let’s also not forget that Christy came to power in 2011 on the heels of the biggest economic collapse since the Great Depression – a natural period for job growth (the NDP faced their own challenges from the global economy int he 90’s). So how much credit can Christy take for these jobs? According to a group of leading BC economists, very little. “I would say the [increase in jobs] is mainly due to market forces,” said Helmut Pastrick, chief economist of Central 1 Credit Union.

It’s also important to consider the specific nature of the jobs we’re creating and losing. For instance, most of the new jobs under Christy’s reign have come in urban centres. “The rest of the economic regions in B.C.— the interior, the north, they are actually losing jobs, and that is worrisome,” says Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives’ economist Iglika Ivanova.

Rural British Columbians know all too well the harsh realities of the BC Liberal job record. On their watch we’ve gone from 100,000 jobs in forestry, wood product manufacturing and pulp and paper to just 60,000 – largely due to poor government management, mill closures and raw log exports.  And what of the 100,000 short term and 60,000 longterm LNG jobs Clark won the last election by promising? A handful of short term jobs on projects since shelved. Zero plants or longterm jobs on the horizon, as the bottom has predictably fallen out of the Asian LNG market.

Finally, many of the jobs Clark has created are low-wage, part-time, short-term, and without benefits. Here’s what a recent report from The Vancouver Sun had to say on the topic:

[quote]…an analysis of the federal labour force survey shows the share of part-time jobs has steadily grown here, from 15 per cent in 1976 to nearly a quarter of all jobs in 2016.

In fact, Statistics Canada data shows, of the 72,000 new jobs created in 2016, more than half were part-time. [/quote]

Adds UBC Sauder School of Business Professor Mark Thompson, “They overlook the fact that we lag the rest of the country in full-time jobs and that the rate of wage increases has been amongst the worst in Canada.”

Unliveable Costs

Even if Christy Clark was telling the truth about her job creation record, what good is a job if you can’t afford your rent and bills? This is why affordability has become the biggest issue of this election. When Christy’s predecessor Gordon Campbell took office, the average price of a detached home in Greater Vancouver was about $369,000. That peaked last year at over $1.8 million! And Christy owns this one much more than Campbell. Since her Johnny-come-lately foreign buyers’ tax, the market for detached homes has cooled a little, but now it’s condos on the rise. The most dramatic increases have happened on Christy’s watch, as a Global News story from a year ago explained:

[quote]…[The Real Estate Board of Vancouver’s] data shows the average price of a single-family detached home in the Greater Vancouver area has increased as much in the past five months as it did from 1981 to 2005.

The average price of a sold detached home was $1.4 million in September last year [2015] – but climbed to $1.6 million in October, $1.7 million in December, and $1.8 million last month – overall, an increase of $420,000.[/quote]

At the pocketbook level, what used to be among North America’s most affordable power bills have almost doubled since the Liberals came to power. ICBC premiums are headed in the same direction . In 2001, there were no bridge tolls in the Lower Mainland; today, people are being nickle-and-dimed to death, or driving extra distances to avoid tolled routes. Childcare costs have skyrocketed – which has even the Board of Trade raising alarms over the negative effect on our economy. Meanwhile, for BC’s least advantaged, disability and welfare rates have barely moved.

Time after time, we hear stories of bright tech employees turning down jobs in Vancouver or young, talented professionals fleeing the city for rural communities or other provinces. We don’t yet have a grasp on the real cost of this brain drain of the Liberals’ making.

One financial metric is way up under the Liberals’ reign: corporate donations to the Liberal Party. If we judge her on this factor alone, Christy Clark is a bona-fide financial wizard. But by many other measures, it’s high time British Columbians came to realize they have far less to fear with the NDP than they’ve been told and a whole lot to lose by sticking with the BC Liberals.

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About Damien Gillis

Damien Gillis is a Vancouver-based documentary filmmaker with a focus on environmental and social justice issues - especially relating to water, energy, and saving Canada's wild salmon - working with many environmental organizations in BC and around the world. He is the co-founder, along with Rafe Mair, of The Common Sense Canadian, and a board member of both the BC Environmental Network and the Haig-Brown Institute.

15 thoughts on “Why the BC Liberal economic record is actually worse than the NDP’s in 90’s

    1. This link to Environment Canada, etc. that you mentioned, doesn’t go directly to any forecast of energy needs that i could see, without spending hours perusing their bloated website. I would be very suspicious of any report put out by that organization (EC), in any case, with a non-scientist like McKenna in charge, totally political who doesn’t have a clue about the real world and real environmental issues. Whereas i would give the UBC report a lot of credibility. Damien has done a fantastic job summarizing this complex issue.

  1. Hopefully, the bc liberal election strategy of “24-7 in your face Christy” will backfire and the public will be spared seeing this narcissist travel around waving and smiling at lavish costs. Your article raises so many good points that it’s hard to zero in on the one that breaks the deal but in a way, they’re all related. The secret pay to play schemes, the tax breaks to party donors, the bad policy of bankrupting public utilities ( I knew of a CEO once that had the Canadian division pay “fees” to his American plants and he quickly bankrupted the company) to show balanced budgets. The lies, particularly LNG are so egregious that it would get any leader in a business fired if a strategy failed that badly and didn’t deliver. Clark is a truly despicable human being, but not surprising she’s where she is with the company she keeps. Hopefully BC will be done with this mess next week, but I fear we’re in for more of the same. Yuck!

  2. Thank you Damien and Rafe for doing the kind of reporting we can’t get from PostMedia and Black Press. Tyee, of course, does the kind of deep reporting that Postmedia and Black Press run away from.

    The problem is that most BC voters never see it.

    That’s why so many people believe the lies they’re being told here. It’s all they see. It’s all they hear.

    On May 9th, we must all do every damn thing we can to get out a more informed vote. Word of mouth, no stone unturned, the little engine that could, etc.

    But if this corrupt and incompetent ‘government’ cons voters into yet another term, we MUST find a way to spread indie reporting to the wider world.

    This may start with finding ways to join forces or pool resources.

    1. Oops. Wish there was an edit button.

      I meant to say that the Tyee also does it [along with Common-sense Canadian and other alternate sites]. Meaning that we should join forces for greater reach. And when I talked about lies people are told ‘here’, I certainly didn’t mean this fine website. I meant here in BC.

      After 16 years we’re seeing the progressive vote increasingly split. This is a recipe for eternal right-wing minority rule.

      So we can’t sit around hoping every 4 years for an NDP win against increasingly heavy odds. We need to change those odds with a high-profile alternate media that can cut back the brainwashing.

      We just need to reach another 5 or 6% of people to end this nightmare.

  3. Well all I can see that Christy has accomplished is jobs …. a whole pile of Part-time or casual jobs at min. wage with no benefits and a lot of burnout from trying to juggle a bunch of jobs while trying to make ends meet.

    We need full-time jobs with benefits, we need social services, we need the same medical benefits other provinces get, we need affordable housing, We need infrastructure that is not falling apart, We need wage increase so we can stay ahead of inflation, We need affordable post secondary education……..We need so much more than just jobs

    We do not need Site C dam we need to invest in green energy that won’t destroy valuable farm land and sensitive ecology. We do not need a politician that pads her own wallet while our most vulnerable peoples can’t find a home to rent and are forced into shelters or onto the street. We do not need to sell our natural resources to foreign entities in their raw state in a sense giving away jobs. We do not need a government that put large corporations ahead of its people. We do not need a politician that only considers Vancouver’s needs … BC does not end at Hope!!

    Christy’s rule has done nothing for me or my family I am worse off today than I was 8 years ago but than again I am not one of the 1% so I don’t matter .

  4. CC is a pathological liar, a Hallmark of a sociopath. If a population is told something false often enough, for long enough, it becomes implanted in their minds as true. It’s a classic method of manipulation on witness stands. CC has chanted the same shite for so long, she has a section of the population unable to think independently. It is called false memory. It’s a marketing tool as well. How often are we told that in order to improve affordability we have to increase housing supply and densify? No, it’s a far different issue than that, but people blindly accept it as truth and continue allowing their lives to spiral out of control, all the while business rakes in the money. Another classic is that we need temporary foreign workers to do the jobs Canadians won’t. Hello, I know plenty of Canadians would be happy to have the jobs that TFW are filling right now! It’s about controlling the workers and maximizing profits. It used to be called slavery, sometimes abuse.

    Get rid of this toxic creature. She makes Donald Trump look like a philanthropic genius,

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