All my life I have supported conservative causes and
parties financially, in my writings, and lectures. I even spent four years in the
federal parliament as the member of the right-wing Reform Party. Yet, in this
election I will vote for the Liberals and hope that Justin Trudeau will head
the next government.
No, I am not out of my mind and lost faith in
conservative principles. Instead, I believe that it is in the longer run
interest of the conservative movement in Canada if the Liberals and Trudeau will
be in office during the next four years when they will face the need for highly
unpopular policies needed to deal with the inevitable consequences of their past,
irresponsible economic and social policies. They will lose voter support for
many years, which would befall the Conservatives if they were in power when these
policies must be adopted.
The past irresponsible Liberal economic policies will
lead to inflation and higher interest rates needed to deal with it. Inflation
has already begun and led to significant increases in the prices of gasoline,
food, lumber, automobiles, and housing. Expecting inflation, investors have
bought inflation-proof assets such as bitcoins, gold, works of art and
collectibles, driving up their prices to unprecedented heights. All the
necessary conditions for the continuation of this inflation are in place.
Inflation inevitably leads to higher interest rates.
If the Bank of Canada does not raise rates soon, it will have to raise them
later when the experience of the 1970-80s is repeated. On that occasion, price
increases were considered to be due to temporary, reversible events and
therefore not requiring higher interest rates. As it turned out, the increase
in the price of energy caused by OPEC output restrictions led to price
increases in other commodities, which ultimately spread to the rest of the economy,
led to higher wages, and made the Bank of Canada use record levels of interest
rates to stop the price increases.
If the Bank of Canada accepts the view that current
price increases are not temporary and reversible, it will raise interest rates
soon to reduce excess demand, which is the ultimate cause of all inflations. Continued
federal deficits and spending by consumers of the excess holdings of money created
by poorly targeted transfers during the pandemic will not help but make the Bank’s
job more difficult.
Whether soon or later, interest rates will almost
certainly increase during the mandate of the next government. The higher rates
will increase mortgage defaults, higher unemployment, personal and business
bankruptcies, and government deficits. Canada’s economy will be in a classic
recession bringing great hardships to many.
But this is not the only serious problem caused by higher
interest rates. The cost of servicing the record federal debt of $1.3 trillion
will increase and add to the already programmed large deficits. The country’s
credit rating will be lowered by international credit rating agencies and
further increase the government’s borrowing costs.
The bottom line is that, within the term of the next
government, the Liberals will have no choice but to adopt politically very
costly cuts in program spending and increases in all taxes. They will try to
blame the Conservatives, the pandemic and climate change for the need to adopt
the highly unpopular policies. These efforts will not be credible.
The large debt is due mostly to Liberal-inspired woke
policies designed to increase the welfare state and pandemic-fighting policies that
cost much more than they would have if timing and targeting had been better. The
cost of climate change policies will hit consumers hard who will see no clear
benefits, especially as China and other big polluting countries fail to reduce
their levels of pollution.
If the Liberals win the next election, they will face
another serious political problem, which is the result of their strong moral
support of interest groups whose members have in common certain personal
characteristics that are united under the LGBTQ+ banner and include natives and
racial minorities. The Liberal have until now supported these minorities mostly
by encouraging them in their view that are suffering from personal and systemic
discrimination, which is the cause of their low incomes and social status.
Many ordinary Canadians preoccupied with work and
other personal concerns have been unaware of this Liberal support of minorities.
Others have accepted them because they have not been affected materially or
find them consistent with their sense of moral responsibilities for the
underdogs in society. However, in the coming years, these interest groups will demand
that the Liberals adopt the “Reset” policies they promised to eliminate
discrimination and create greater equality of income and social standings.
The equalization of incomes will require higher transfer
payments to these groups and increased taxes on high-income Canadians. The
elimination of discrimination will require the mandated use of quotas in employment
and educational institutions. Meeting
the demands of natives will require large spending increases. Immigrant
communities will be satisfied only if they can welcome increasing numbers of their
relatives and friends who upon arrival will increase shortages in the housing
market, and public health and recreation facilities.
These policies will materially affect the vast
majority of Canadians who are not members of the LGBTQ+ community, natives, and
immigrants. They will also feel unjustly accused of personal and systemic
discrimination and oppose resets in Canada’s culture and economic system that
have served them extremely well in the past and evolved successfully through
time.
It will be good to see the Liberals lose much voter
support if they will the next election as they deal with the cost of inflation,
higher interest, a recession, and the consequences of having created the high
expectations of minorities. The Conservatives will benefit from the Liberals
conundrum and will have strong voter support for a long time in the future.
That is why I will vote Liberal and urge others to do the same.
I suspect this is a bit too clever ... a bit like not stock trading in the here and now ... SOP (standard operating procedure) for any incoming government, whatever they promised, is to say that things are much worse than they imagined because of the incompetence/criminality of their predecessors, and then try to fix things by cutting spending and raising taxes and not doing stupid stuff ... a government with a good majority doesn't have to worry about the electorate for several years.
ReplyDelete