Account Login/Registration

Access KelownaNow using your Facebook account, or by entering your information below.


Facebook


OR


Register

Privacy Policy

Spencer Fernando: Trudeau Liberals are making Canadians poorer by refusing to cut spending

Spencer Fernando is a writer, commentator, podcast host and former political insider. His career has included spells working for the Conservative Party and Manitoba Progressive Conservatives. He is now a campaign fellow with the National Citizens Coalition. His work can be found here.


Following the release of the Liberal "plan" to fight inflation – a plan which is based on higher spending which will make things ever worse – the Liberal government is facing escalating criticism.

Scotiabank has entered the fray, warning that continued high levels of federal spending will necessitate higher interest rates and more pain for everyone in the private sector:

“The output losses that the [Bank of Canada] must engineer to rein in inflation are falling disproportionately on the private sector,” said the report by Scotiabank Chief Economist Jean-Francois Perrault and Rene Lalonde, the bank’s director of forecasting.

“In effect, high levels of fiscal spending will necessitate an unnecessarily large crowding out of private spending,” they said. “Less government consumption would lead to a lower path for the policy rate and take some of the burden of adjustment away from the private sector.”

The need for lower federal spending is something I’ve been talking about for some time, and we as common-sense people know that reducing federal spending would help bring down inflation.

However, the Trudeau Liberals are so locked into a statist, big-government ideology that they can’t even conceive of cutting spending.

Additionally, Trudeau and the vast Liberal government apparatus seem to be hell-bent on maintaining their own standard of living at the expense of the rest of us.

<who> Photo credit: Getty Images

Bank of Canada enabling backfires

A main reason the Bank of Canada’s credibility has been shredded to such a significant degree is that they enabled Trudeau’s big-spending, high-tax agenda for such a long-time.

As a result, the Bank of Canada became complicit in Trudeau’s inflationary policies.

This has backfired big-time.

Since Canadians now largely associate the Bank of Canada with Trudeau’s agenda, and since the Bank of Canada has been wrong so many times, the Bank will have to go even further to fight inflation than they would have.

They will have to raise rates even higher, and – since the feds won’t cut spending – they will inflict their damage on the private sector.

Since the vast majority of Canadians work for the private sector rather than the government, that means a small group of Liberal-government connected individuals will be spared the pain, while most Canadians see their earning power continue to erode.

Wrecking the nation

The reckless spending of the Liberal government is now both a short-term and a long-term problem.

While the Liberals often claim that spending more now alleviates economic pain – leaving the debt to be dealt with at some indeterminate time in the future – we are now seeing that spending more is largely the cause of economic pain now.

Inflation is a problem that a country can’t spend its way out of.

Quite the contrary.

Cutting spending and embracing fiscal restraint is what is needed.

By refusing to accept this fundamental reality, the Trudeau Liberals are ensuring that more and more Canadians are robbed of our purchasing power, and they are continuing to wreck the economy of our nation.



If you get value from KelownaNow and believe local independent media is important to our community we ask that you please consider subscribing to our daily newsletter.

If you appreciate what we do, we ask that you consider supporting our local independent news platform.


Send your comments, news tips, typos, letter to the editor, photos and videos to news@kelownanow.com.



Weather
webcam icon

weather-icon
Thu
12℃

weather-icon
Fri
11℃

weather-icon
Sat
12℃

weather-icon
Sun
15℃

weather-icon
Mon
17℃

weather-icon
Tue
16℃

current feed webcam icon

Recent Livestream




Top Stories

Follow Us

Follow us on Instagram Follow us on Twitter Like us on Facebook Follow us on Linkedin Follow us on Youtube Listen on Soundcloud Follow Our TikTok Feed Follow Our RSS Follow Our pinterest Feed
Follow Our Newsletter
Privacy Policy