Election aftermath?
Election, the silly time is over. After listening to the politics, I
can’t help but think of John Cleese and Monty Python’s Final Rip-off, a
harmless amusing satire. Contrary to real life politics, in which the
politics our society decided to inject into parliament and government,
October 14, 2008, is not a laughing matter, nor harmless. Particularly
politics that seem to ignore that sustainable social satisfaction, good
health, a sound ecology, global warming, and political stability
entirely depend on a sustainable economy, produced by research that
increases understanding.
The election aftermath will show. Have we as a society elected a
government that early enough addresses the issues in our economy that
hamper sustainable economic development, that which is not private
sector’s task? A government that technically, early enough addresses
faults in the economy’s allocating mechanism that unsolved causes social
and economic adversity? Or will we end up with a play for the gallery
and TV in the parliament, a government that manages rather than solves
problems – a rip-off.
Make no mistake, just like when the airline oversight and air traffic
control system fails, the aircraft crashes and passengers are injured
and killed. In a mixed economy, when government fails in its task,
again that which is not private sector’s task, inevitably this will
cause different degrees of social, economic and ecological adversity,
and in fact kills people.
For example, the not long ago government’s failure in oversight and
control, allowing a company to distribute
listeriosis
contaminated food that killed people. Another example is the
current malfeasant in US’s financial system
spreading around the globe, not directly killing people but causing
social adversity.
Supposedly, because of
good government oversight, our banks are in good shape; are we hearing
the truth? With
$811 billion of
Credit Default
Swaps, roughly 62
percent of the Canadian GDP is that good government oversight? The
question of course is how many Credit Defaults Swaps are coming due in
the current mess. Let’s hope for the best and that those in charge will
learn something.
Then there are the ongoing
problems, in the forest sector, the healthcare hodgepodge, emigration,
First Nation, taxation and all other issues that are government’s task
in a mixed economy to address, - and not private sectors. On
healthcare, why is Canada adopting a US healthcare model which can only
be at the expense of factors that create good health, and eliminate one
of Canada’s prime comparable advantages in the global economy?
Sadly, in British Columbia the forest sector offers one of the best
illustrations of faults in the allocation mechanism, and government’s
failure to address the issues, causing irreparable harm to society.
Briefly, the underlying problem is that the former ‘soviet union style’
semi-planned economic system effectively
eliminated all real competition and guaranteed private industry access
to a supply of cheap timber, thereby eroding natural market allocation
and pricing mechanisms. A low Canadian dollar further artificially made
Canadian products cheaper and industry prices more competitive at home
and abroad. This subsequently eliminated industry’s incentive to
recognize and adapt to new conditions in the economy and marketplace.
The need to invest in R&D, to increase understanding necessary to
invent new ways of doing things, develop new products that add value
using fewer resources. It allowed industry to substantially ignore
ecological and sustainability issues.
The result was that the BC
forest industry failed to identify and address economic and market
shifts, which can also be observed in the automotive and other sectors.
During the good times, the system failed to encourage long-term
investment in R&D and adding value, using fewer resources and developing
new markets and not only China. During the bad times, it stimulated
industry to expect government assistance and bailouts. A system that
inevitably will fail.
This created a series of
long-term problems for BC, and Canada at large, that continues to erode
economic production, and hence quality of life in many communities.
Capitalism and free enterprise, depends on good government. It is
daunting that there still are people in key positions in society that
religiously believe that we will solve the problem humanity is facing
with Adam Smith’s fable of the invisible hand from the eighteenth
century. Could it be because they have an invisible hand - in the cookie
jar?
It is bizarre to now hear
people calling for and applaud a lower Canadian versus US dollar. Since
one of the underlying causes to manufacturing sectors problem today was
the low Canadian versus US dollar. Artificially boosting
competitiveness, made investment in R&D and new technology, to increase
productivity less a priority, and promoted “brainless” branch plants and
addicted industry to the US market. Are we seeing the same mistakes
being repeated again?
What is needed is an
industrial strategy and investment in socially relevant research and
policies that address not the symptoms but the underlying causes that
hamper investment in sustainable economic production, and employment.
Not political patronized driven tax transfers to a few well connected
people/companies, under the label of diversification, future, community
or other so-called worthy causes.
While fundamental systemic
and structural “disease”, the real underlying cause to the problems in
our economy, are left untreated causing adversity. Trade commissions,
economic development officers and political cronies are traveling to
China at the taxpayer’s expense-the culture of entitlement. Hard working
members of the community volunteer time and effort to sit on committees
to advise paid politicians, bureaucrats and their consultants on what
they are paid to know, and what should have been done many years ago?
Politically, this is an old method of avoiding accountability to ensure
that nobody is accountable – a rip-off. Why is society accepting
this?
Ultimately, the core
message, or a reminder in this is, that the behaviour in government
reflects the level of understanding and the moral and ethical value of
the society that elected them. Fifty-nine percent voter participation
is a national shame - are we getting what we deserve? Voting and social
activism ensures that government meets its task in the economy after the
election, and is a democratic privilege and obligation. Being concerned
about the issues that truly matter for the present and future
generations, and getting involved is what creates good government, and a
better society. Right-minded individual activism leads to consensus and
creates positive change. Get involved – use democracy or lose it.
October 16, 2008
OISD