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Uzelman: Axe the Tax? The alternatives are much more costly

A column by Bruce Uzelman
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CanadaB次元官网网址檚 price on pollution is supposed to help battle global warming, but as it nears its fifth anniversary, nothing in Canadian politics is hotter. Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre has so successfully convinced Canadians the carbon price is to blame for inflation that he even earned begrudging respect for his B次元官网网址渁xe the taxB次元官网网址 campaign from Prime Minister Justin Trudeau. Poilievre holds a press conference regarding his B次元官网网址淎xe the TaxB次元官网网址 message from the roof a parking garage in St. JohnB次元官网网址檚 on Friday, Oct.27, 2023. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Paul Daly

Pierre Poilievre has raised his refrain across the country, B次元官网网址淎xe the Tax!B次元官网网址 He is referring to the carbon tax, of course. But he has been mute about how he will replace it, and how he will fight climate change. His only suggestion has been B次元官网网址渢echnology.B次元官网网址 ThatB次元官网网址檚 a non-answer. How will he convince the private sector to make the massive investment required in technology?

Experts suggest carbon pricing is the right choice. CanadaB次元官网网址檚 Ecofiscal Commission, a panel of economists, in a 2019 report recommended it. B次元官网网址淎 stringent, rising carbon tax can get Canada to its 2030 target at the lowest possible price to the economy.B次元官网网址 The commission affirmed this finding is B次元官网网址渃onsistent with numerous other studies.B次元官网网址

In addition to the carbon tax, there are two other broad climate policy options: regulation and subsidies. The Trudeau government has rashly chosen all of the above. They have revealed a series of climate regulations applying to broad sectors of the economy to supplement the carbon tax. The government now seeks to regulate electrical generation, oil and gas production, home and commercial construction, automobile production and no doubt more sectors.

Their goal is to impose emissions limits upon a wide swath of manufacturing and resource industries, while incentivizing company and consumer actions it wants where it canB次元官网网址檛 regulate, and where it can as well. This effort is ill-advised for three reasons:

First, the constitutionality of the regulations is suspect. Alberta and Saskatchewan will object to federal intrusion in their jurisdiction over resources. The Supreme Court, in a comparable case, ruled the Impact Assessment Act is largely unconstitutional. The court asserted that the federal government must respect the B次元官网网址渄ivision of powers framework laid out in the constitution.B次元官网网址

Grant Bishop argues in a C.D. Howe Institute memo that the court has precluded, B次元官网网址渂road federal jurisdiction for regulating each and every GHG-emitting activity.B次元官网网址 Bishop states the IMA ruling puts the governmentB次元官网网址檚 net-zero electricity regulation and industry-specific cap on emissions of the oil and gas industry on B次元官网网址渟haky constitutional ground.B次元官网网址 These matters could remain before the courts for years to come, creating uncertainty and impeding private sector investment.

Second, companies will find themselves subject to heavy costs related to climate regulation in all targeted industries. The costs will further weigh on the competitiveness of Canadian goods and on the economy more broadly. CanadaB次元官网网址檚 present economic and income growth is arguably amongst the worst in the developed world. Under the Liberals, that is destined to continue.

Third, to continue to follow the lead of the Biden Administration in the United States B次元官网网址 providing subsidies for clean industries and clean incentives for consumers B次元官网网址 is prohibitively expensive. It will further erode the governmentB次元官网网址檚 fiscal position and CanadaB次元官网网址檚 competitive position.

The Ecofiscal Commission report examined three approaches to reduce emissions to CanadaB次元官网网址檚 2030 target. A significantly higher economy-wide carbon tax results in GDP per capita about $1200 higher in 2030 than does subsidies and economy-wide regulations, and $3300 higher than does subsidies and industry-specific regulations. In fact, under the last approach, GDP per capita falls. A version of this approach is the one the Liberals have inappropriately adopted.

Bishop correctly concludes, B次元官网网址淥ttawaB次元官网网址檚 climate policy risks spiraling into an economic and constitutional mess. B次元官网网址 With industry exasperated by policy uncertainty in Canada and diverting investment elsewhere, Ottawa should spend less effort on expanding federal power and instead bolster its capabilities for competently administering carbon pricing nationally.B次元官网网址

It is not hyperbolic to suggest that Liberal climate policies may threaten CanadiansB次元官网网址 livelihood and CanadaB次元官网网址檚 national unity.

Back to Poilievre. To vilify the carbon tax was an astute political move. He saw the affordability crisis coming, and he shrewdly and consistently focused on it before his political opponents did. B次元官网网址淎xe the taxB次元官网网址 is a major piece of this strategy, and has aided the ConservativesB次元官网网址 rise in the polls.

But it is unfortunate the CPC have successfully turned public opinion against the tax. If the Conservatives assume power, they will have effectively taken CanadaB次元官网网址檚 least costly option for addressing climate change off the table. And they will have rejected the best policy option for a free-enterprise, Conservative government B次元官网网址 a market-based approach to reduce GHG emissions.

Finally, if a prospective Conservative government is to cut emissions, they will be forced to adopt the more intrusive and costly regulatory and subsidization policies championed by the Liberals. That is an adverse outcome for any government and for the country!

bruce

Bruce W Uzelman, based in Kelowna, holds interests in economics and political science.

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