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Is Ontario The Next Rustbelt?

Posted: 08/11/2012 8:51 am

After years of lagging the rest of the advanced world, investment in Canadian plant and equipment has at last caught up.

That's the good news in a recent report by the C.D. Howe Institute. Here's the bad news. One important province has fallen even further behind: the province of Ontario.

The report by Benjamin Dachis and William Robson tracks Canadian performance by province over the course of the past decade. They observe:

"In the early 2000s, the [investment] gap with the [rest of the] OECD widened. For every dollar of new business investment per worker across OECD countries from 2001 to 2005, Canadian businesses invested 94 cents, and for every dollar of investment per US worker, Canadian businesses invested 79 cents. Since then, Canada's performance has improved. From 2006 to 2010, our businesses invested 99 cents per worker for every dollar invested across the OECD, and 88 cents for each dollar invested by US businesses. Preliminary 2011 data show Canadian businesses investing more per worker than the OECD average -- 102 cents per dollar across the group -- and maintaining the late-2000s average of 88 cents per dollar invested in the United States."

Investment leads to productivity improvement. Productivity improvement leads to rising standards of living. Yay.

Unless you live in what used to be the economic powerhouse of Confederation. Then suddenly the outcome becomes grimmer.

"Ontario ... continues a long-term slide. After getting 77 cents of new investment for every dollar invested across the OECD in the early 2000s (65 against the United States) and 72 in the late 2000s (63 against the United States), Ontario workers may get a mere 70 in 2012 (and only 60 against the United States)."

New Brunswick does little better; Nova Scotia even worse. Quebec has avoided going backward only because it started so low in the first place.

The obvious explanation for the differential is the global resources boom. But Dachis and Robson point to some other important and likely to be neglected factors as well, including,

(1) Because many Canadian industries remain protected from the full brunt of international competition they may feel they do not need to invest as much as they would if they had to compete with the best in the world.

(2) The boom in residential investment may be diverting investment dollars that would otherwise have flowed to plant and equipment.

(3) The laggard provinces have failed to adjust their taxes in an investment-friendly direction, Dalton McGuinty's Ontario being one of the very worst offenders in this regard.

The outlook is most grim for Ontario. Like the U.S. Rustbelt, Ontario has been losing industrial jobs, and only new business investment can create the post-industrial jobs of the future. Ontario is not immune to the social consequences of deindustrialization: income decline among less educated people, especially men; family breakdown as men become less marriageable; diminished life chances for children raised without fathers.

Canadians should not arrogantly assume that what has happened to Detroit, Cleveland, and Pittsburgh cannot happen to Brantford, Trenton and Windsor. It can happen, and it is happening. Oil wealth may pay for social programs to cushion the shock of job loss, but a stable society must provide work, not welfare, to its young men and future fathers.

The great economist Robert Lucas famously said: "Once you start thinking about economic growth, it is hard to think about anything else." Economic growth is based upon the business investment. The statistics gathered by the C.D. Howe Institute may not carry the sensation of Olympic medals -- but they are the true deciders of the future for the next generation of Canadians, and the generation after that as well.

This blog is cross-posted at the National Post.

 
 
 

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12:19 AM on 08/15/2012
I would just like to clarify one thing - Canadians are not arrogant - that term is reserved strictly for Americans! LOL!
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Mike Keohane
10:10 PM on 08/13/2012
The TSX has dropped .5% this year compared to an 8.1% increase for the MSCI world index - the worst performance since 1998 and the worst performance this year for any G20 economy. The TSX could decline as much as 10% this year as Toronto housing contracts and oil sector industrial orders, barring a midest war, dry up as the price of oil declines further. The Ontario government is awash in unserviceable debt. Public sentiment is anti-business.

Check out Gary, Indiana - that's Ontario at the end of the decade.
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Larry Mutter
04:38 PM on 08/13/2012
C.D Howe,really,thats the mentality that helped create the world situation.With the world globally linked into one vast free market system it will all collapse together.
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Penny Will
Founder of Flutegirl.ca
08:44 AM on 08/13/2012
Why tax breaks to Corporations?
How about if you buy something 100% manufactured in Canada, a Canadian citizen pays 0 tax. I would rather see government subsidies go directly to Canadians.
Perhaps it would create a 'trickle up' economy.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jimboy71
Hen Diapheron Heautoi
12:26 AM on 08/13/2012
The problem that free market, right wing acolytes of Milty Friedman and Ludwig Von Mises refuse to recognize is that globalisation inevitably leads to manufacturing moving where labour is cheap. This process is the direct result of free trade and the globalist agenda.

The perennial panacea of tax cuts proposed by the right simply doesn't work, unless they are middle and working class tax cuts that drive spending.
01:45 PM on 08/12/2012
Canada has some of the lowest business tax burdens in the world, and has for many years. The myth disseminated by Frum et al (the guy who lied the US into the Iraqi War) that Canada's taxes are too high is pure myth. Canadian small-medium-and large businesses are some of the biggest corporate welfare benefactors in the country.

KPMG one of the world's largest providers of Audits, Tax and Advisory Services put Frum's myth to bed.

http://www.kpmg.com/ca/en/issuesandinsights/articlespublications/press-releases/pages/canadastax-friendlyenvironmentforbusinessrankssecondaheadoflargestwesterneconomies-kpmgstudy.aspx
12:08 PM on 08/12/2012
I consult to a business that gets given $50 million by the government every year and then drive to a company making that in revenues every year. It is shocking how hard it is to own a business. No empathy from most. Unless those owners are supported more, they will not take the risks they need to take. Instead they are despised for owning business. Meanwhile the crown corporations suck up money and do what? Busy work.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jimboy71
Hen Diapheron Heautoi
12:28 AM on 08/13/2012
No, you will not get empathy from people who realise that it is SUPPOSED TO BE HARD OWNING A BUSINESS.
This comment has been removed.
08:38 AM on 08/12/2012
Blame Harper who has it in for Ontario: for him Canada is only energy, he hates and wants to destroy
the Quebec and Ontario productive capacity.
08:17 PM on 08/13/2012
And those disenfranchised young men for whom there will be no employment? They will be fodder for the reaper in the filthy Syrian civil war that Harper and Co. Cannot wait to join.
07:13 AM on 08/14/2012
...not to forget all the resource wars planned in the heart of Africa...
11:57 PM on 08/11/2012
“Taxes are too damn high” again? Really? Ontario goes down the drain for one simple reason: it is too expensive to run business in Ontario. Let me give you a hint: highest airport fees in the world; highest auto insurance premiums in North America; highest cell phones rates in North America, highest tolls on the 407 in North America, real estate rapidly getting overly expensive as well. List can go on and on. Government protects monopolies. Monopolies (lack of competition) are running Ontario into the ground, and political elite fiddles with “let’s tax monopolies less”. It is deathly spiral.
12:10 PM on 08/12/2012
The SARS tax put in hotels in TO is still in place. Says it all.
01:55 PM on 08/12/2012
Too many rich people driving up the prices.
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rickthaluddite
What noisy cats are we
11:39 PM on 08/11/2012
Six hour from when a comment is posted until it's published? Way to keep a vibrant dialogue going. This site is starting to rot!
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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Douglas Sinclair
sufferin' succotash!
06:05 PM on 08/12/2012
I've even offered to help moderate several times since its supposedly a volunteer based site but no response yet. Yeah, its frustrating. At least your post got posted! Several of mine (polite ones even) got totally lost in the ozone. (Perhaps where they belong, mind you).
09:16 PM on 08/11/2012
Ontario will be a rustbelt if Harper has his way. He's trying his hardest to break the back of the manufacturing sector and Bay Street, and move all economic power west to Alberta.
Thus, he destroys a longstanding liberal powerbase, and shreds the unions at the same time. Win, win - except for Canada.
12:10 PM on 08/12/2012
Bay street is completely in the bag for liberals and so is our province. Harper is right to focus on his power base.
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jimboy71
Hen Diapheron Heautoi
12:29 AM on 08/13/2012
Not at the expense of the country, he isn't.
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07:27 AM on 08/13/2012
And this is how politics destroys an economy....
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rickthaluddite
What noisy cats are we
05:43 PM on 08/11/2012
Perhaps the feds should join the province in promoting (and investing in) more green energy projects. We have lots of lots of land where we should be putting even more solar and wind power installations. I know it goes against everything Mr. Harper believes that only black gold is the only energy worth subsidizing. Alberta and Saskatchewan won't deliver another election win on their own.
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11:09 AM on 08/12/2012
Green energy projects are exactly what is impoverishing Ontario. The subsidies given are a grotesque diversion of resources that could be better used elsewhere. Wind especially costs the most per kwh produced, among all sources of generation and isn't reliable in the least. McGuinty, not Harper is to blame for the economic cesspool that is Ontario.
07:52 AM on 08/13/2012
Anyone who likes wind should make sure they study Rare Earth metals mining before they call these useless visual blights Green.
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AuntiFascist
05:05 PM on 08/11/2012
..........and victim of Dutch Disease as whipped up by Mr. Harper.
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Douglas Sinclair
sufferin' succotash!
02:18 PM on 08/11/2012
" The laggard provinces have failed to adjust their taxes in an investment-friendly direction"

I would appreciate any help as to what this statement means.

Thanking you in advance,

D.S.
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rickthaluddite
What noisy cats are we
09:32 PM on 08/11/2012
Compared to the 35% corporate (+state taxes) in the US, Canada is a great place to invest. Cheap to provide supplemental health benefits-- Frum just can't shake his blind neo-con ideology, I guess.
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jimboy71
Hen Diapheron Heautoi
12:30 AM on 08/13/2012
Gotta lick the boot that feeds you.