One of the great dangers any democratic society faces is the enormous buildup of bureaucracy over time

When I was chairman of Magna International Inc., I could always tell how competitive one of our factories was the moment I set foot in the front door. All I had to do was look at how many people were working upstairs in the administrative and executive offices.
One of the great dangers any democratic society faces is the enormous buildup of bureaucracy over time as government grows and extends its reach into all aspects of our lives.
The more regulations we adopt, the more bureaucrats the government needs to administer them. Bureaucracy just keeps mushrooming. All of the new regulations that come along with more government become a hidden cost of doing business that ultimately chokes productivity and makes businesses less competitive.
Last month, I suggested that Canada needed a new national movement of concerned citizens who would endorse seven core principles to revitalize our economy and improve the living standards of all Canadians. One of those core principles was to cut government overhead by reducing spending by five per cent per year over a ten-year period. This reduction needs to happen at every level of government.
By implementing these targeted annual reductions, we would be able to cut government overhead in half by 2033, a decade from now, returning it closer to levels that existed 50 to 60 years ago when economic growth in this country was at an all-time high and living standards for the majority of Canadians were much higher.
In our personal lives and in business, we always have to sort out what our priorities are when it comes to spending. But that’s never the case with government because there’s never any limit on what they can spend.
Ultimately, lower government overhead will allow us to begin lowering taxes for individuals and businesses. For workers, that means more money in their pockets to spend or invest. And for companies, lower government overhead will make them more competitive at a time when the global economic arena is increasingly cutthroat.
The global economy is spinning faster and faster with each passing year, and countries in the West — especially Canada — need to find new and better ways to remain globally competitive.
Jobs are the most precious commodity in the world, and in an effort to raise the living standards of their people, countries everywhere will fight tooth and nail to lure those jobs to their shores. But it’s the leanest and shrewdest countries, the ones with the lowest overhead and the lowest taxes, that will win the lion’s share of new jobs and investment dollars.
If Canada wants to be one of those countries, we need to start reducing our bloated overhead.










