Frank Stronach: Government bureaucracy is the cholesterol clogging up the economy | Canada News Media
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Frank Stronach: Government bureaucracy is the cholesterol clogging up the economy

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Back in the early 1980s, when commercial computers first came onto the market, they were sold with a big promise: they could do the work of an entire floor of employees in a typical office building and could dramatically decrease the amount of paperwork and paper filing for businesses and organizations.

But it never happened. If anything, the piles of paperwork, government forms and compliance reports that needed to be filled out increased enormously — and with it, so too did the size of our bureaucracy.
As a result, today you see hundreds and hundreds more office buildings staffed with more people who devote a large chunk of each workday to regulation compliance requests.

The facts bear this out: government spending as a percentage of National GDP was around 16 per cent in the late 1950s and then it more than doubled in the early 1960s and has steadily grown ever since then, sitting at around 44 per cent today.

Who suffers most as a result? Canadian taxpayers, for sure, since they have to foot the bill for the expansion of our bureaucracy.

But those hardest hit are Canada’s small business owners and entrepreneurs who struggle to cope with a mind-boggling array of regulations, rules, forms and never-ending, always-changing government compliance requests.

Think of commerce as the arteries of our economy, and think of government bureaucracy as the cholesterol clogging everything up.

Government is micro-managing small business to death. All the additional red tape and regulations haven’t made them more competitive or more profitable. On the contrary, it is crippling them.

In a pre-budget submission prepared by the Chartered Professional Accountants of Canada (CPA Canada) in fall of last year, the national accounting organization urged the federal government to act on a Canada Revenue Agency task force report issued in 2011 that identified 61 areas where government could remove regulatory burdens on small businesses. Turns out it was nothing more than another government report collecting dust. More than a decade has passed, and nothing has changed in terms of the paperwork and compliance Canada’s small business and startups get saddled with.

We’ve been spinning our wheels for years now. We need to put a freeze on the introduction of any new regulations and, more importantly, we need to start eliminating as many as unnecessary regulations as possible. Aside from rules that safeguard human health and regulations that protect our environment, government needs to get out of the way of small business.

But the best course of action government can take is to completely eliminate any income tax on any business with 300 or less employees. By doing this, small businesses can re-invest their profits in developing new products and hiring more employees to fuel continued growth and expansion.

On the other hand, large businesses — those with more than 300 employees — should be required to share 20 per cent of their annual profits with employees.

With small businesses, owners know everyone by name. They know how much each individual contributes and reward and compensate their employees accordingly.

But when businesses get really large, those personal bonds slip away. Employees often become numbers. The founders of the companies are usually long gone, having died or sold their business, and the business is now run by a large pension fund or hedge fund. There’s no real affinity for the workers — and the workers know it.

By requiring large businesses to share profits, employees get a fair share of the wealth they help generate, and because they get a slice of the economic pie, they work harder to make the company more profitable. It’s a classic win-win scenario: workers get more pay in their pockets, and companies become more productive and profitable.

I’d even go one step further and entrench these principles in a binding Economic Charter of Rights for all Canadians. It would give Canadians a number of fundamental economic rights — including the right to share in the profits they help produce — and it would impose on government certain responsibilities that would require it to manage our tax dollars responsibly.

It’s distressing to see the number of emails I get from National Post readers who say they’re ready to throw in the towel with their small businesses because they are tired of the red tape, bureaucratic obstruction and high taxes. That’s a shame in a country that was built on the backs of thousands upon thousands of small business owners.

It’s high time we gave Canada’s small business owners the freedom and the space to do what business was meant to do: sell products and services that people want and need, create jobs, and generate economic wealth.

 

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S&P/TSX composite gains almost 100 points, U.S. stock markets also higher

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TORONTO – Strength in the base metal and technology sectors helped Canada’s main stock index gain almost 100 points on Friday, while U.S. stock markets also climbed higher.

The S&P/TSX composite index closed up 93.51 points at 23,568.65.

In New York, the Dow Jones industrial average was up 297.01 points at 41,393.78. The S&P 500 index was up 30.26 points at 5,626.02, while the Nasdaq composite was up 114.30 points at 17,683.98.

The Canadian dollar traded for 73.61 cents US compared with 73.58 cents US on Thursday.

The October crude oil contract was down 32 cents at US$68.65 per barrel and the October natural gas contract was down five cents at US$2.31 per mmBTU.

The December gold contract was up US$30.10 at US$2,610.70 an ounce and the December copper contract was up four cents US$4.24 a pound.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Sept. 13, 2024.

Companies in this story: (TSX:GSPTSE, TSX:CADUSD)

The Canadian Press. All rights reserved.

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Economy

Statistics Canada reports wholesale sales higher in July

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OTTAWA – Statistics Canada says wholesale sales, excluding petroleum, petroleum products, and other hydrocarbons and excluding oilseed and grain, rose 0.4 per cent to $82.7 billion in July.

The increase came as sales in the miscellaneous subsector gained three per cent to reach $10.5 billion in July, helped by strength in the agriculture supplies industry group, which rose 9.2 per cent.

The food, beverage and tobacco subsector added 1.7 per cent to total $15 billion in July.

The personal and household goods subsector fell 2.5 per cent to $12.1 billion.

In volume terms, overall wholesale sales rose 0.5 per cent in July.

Statistics Canada started including oilseed and grain as well as the petroleum and petroleum products subsector as part of wholesale trade last year, but is excluding the data from monthly analysis until there is enough historical data.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Sept. 13, 2024.

The Canadian Press. All rights reserved.

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S&P/TSX composite up more than 150 points, U.S. stock markets mixed

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TORONTO – Canada’s main stock index was up more than 150 points in late-morning trading, helped by strength in the base metal and energy sectors, while U.S. stock markets were mixed.

The S&P/TSX composite index was up 172.18 points at 23,383.35.

In New York, the Dow Jones industrial average was down 34.99 points at 40,826.72. The S&P 500 index was up 10.56 points at 5,564.69, while the Nasdaq composite was up 74.84 points at 17,470.37.

The Canadian dollar traded for 73.55 cents US compared with 73.59 cents US on Wednesday.

The October crude oil contract was up $2.00 at US$69.31 per barrel and the October natural gas contract was up five cents at US$2.32 per mmBTU.

The December gold contract was up US$40.00 at US$2,582.40 an ounce and the December copper contract was up six cents at US$4.20 a pound.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Sept. 12, 2024.

Companies in this story: (TSX:GSPTSE, TSX:CADUSD)

The Canadian Press. All rights reserved.

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