Big Government

Socialist workers dystopia

Matthew Lau
November 8, 2018
Bribing voters with their own, other people’s, or borrowed money has a long history in Canada. The latest example is the Liberal government’s plan to price “pollution” in provinces without a carbon tax by making the tax rebate bigger than the tax itself. Another form of vote-buying, writes Matthew Lau, is labour regulation that forces employers to pay workers higher wages and provide greater benefits. When Ontario’s late Wynne government did this, it predictably hurt job growth. So the bribe failed, and the Ford government is now partially deregulating the labour market to make workers, and the provincial economy, more competitive.
Big Government

Socialist workers dystopia

Matthew Lau
November 8, 2018
Bribing voters with their own, other people’s, or borrowed money has a long history in Canada. The latest example is the Liberal government’s plan to price “pollution” in provinces without a carbon tax by making the tax rebate bigger than the tax itself. Another form of vote-buying, writes Matthew Lau, is labour regulation that forces employers to pay workers higher wages and provide greater benefits. When Ontario’s late Wynne government did this, it predictably hurt job growth. So the bribe failed, and the Ford government is now partially deregulating the labour market to make workers, and the provincial economy, more competitive.
Share on Facebook
Share on Twitter

Over the past year labour income growth in Canada has slowed, while in the United States workers are enjoying the highest annual wage growth since 2009. The divergence reflects differing government policy directions. In the US, corporate tax cuts are encouraging investment and attracting businesses. But in Canada, governments have instead relied on counterproductive approaches, such as the heavy regulation of labour.

Case in point: Bill 148, the so-called “Fair Workplaces, Better Jobs” legislation introduced last year by the former Liberal government in Ontario. The most highly publicized “benefit” to workers of this legislation – a sharp minimum wage hike from $11.60 to $14 per hour – has so far backfired. Philip Cross, former Chief Economic Analyst at Statistics Canada, observes in a recent report that the minimum wage increase “had the inevitable effect of slowing job growth… the number of people in Ontario holding a job fell in the first half of the year.”

Fortunately, the tide of bad policy is beginning to recede, with the new Conservative government under Premier Doug Ford delivering a recent victory for Ontario workers by repealing and amending parts of Bill 148. Predictably, the NDP, Liberals, and unions swiftly condemned Ford for supposedly depriving downtrodden workers of decent wages, paid personal days, more predictable work schedules, and equal pay for part-time workers. In fact, Ford has done no such thing.

The fallacy underpinning the case for these labour regulations is that the price of employment – in the form of wages and non-wage compensation – plays no role in determining the amount of labour hours transacted between workers and firms. Those who believe this fiction imagine that employment is predetermined, so raising by law the price of employment only enriches workers by transferring the economic surplus generated by productive work from the employer to the employee.

In reality, these labour regulations favoured by interventionists are harmful to workers. Legislation entitling workers to more personal days, for example, means that businesses will not find it profitable to hire as many workers except by reducing wages in order to pay for enhanced non-wage benefits. In other words, the cost to businesses of providing these personal days is actually paid for by workers in the form of reduced wages.

That’s why Bill 148 didn’t enrich workers by entitling them to more personal days. Instead it made it illegal for workers to be employed unless they purchased, by accepting lower wages, personal days from their employer. That doesn’t actually help workers who want more personal days, since there is nothing preventing them from accepting lower wages in exchange for more personal days (or other benefits) in the absence of Bill 148. Indeed, many workers do just that.

Meanwhile, workers who don’t want to purchase personal days and other benefits from employers were made worse off by Bill 148. Especially serious harm was done to the lowest-skilled workers, who could not afford to purchase these benefits because the government made it illegal for them to accept lower wages. By simultaneously hiking the minimum wage while piling these regulations onto workers, the Liberals put many Ontarians in a situation where the cost of employing them is so high that businesses cannot profitably do so. The predictable result was thousands of lost jobs.

The new policy direction under the Conservatives is flawed, to be sure, but only because it does not go nearly far enough in its rewrite of Bill 148. Critically, the minimum wage hike was not rescinded, although Ford sensibly scrapped further increases and instituted a freeze for 33 months. Too many other provisions were kept in place – such as more mandatory paid vacation days for workers after five years of employment – allegedly to protect workers.

But workers are not protected by restrictions on the types of employment relationships they can enter into with willing employers. The only thing that effectively protects workers is competition. Just as Tim Hortons’ patrons can walk across the street to McDonald’s if Tim’s starts overcharging for coffee, so too can their employees leave for other establishments if Tim’s refuses to pay them competitively.

Tim Hortons’ employees aren’t protected by Bill 148 and other government regulations. They are are protected by the presence of McDonald’s, and Second Cup, and Starbucks. As Milton Friedman said, a worker is protected by the employers “who would like to hire him for whom he doesn’t work.” The best way to protect workers is to attract more competing businesses.

That’s why the current American approach of cutting taxes and regulation is yielding positive results, while Canadian labour regulations such as those in Bill 148 have driven away business and harmed workers. If Canada’s federal and provincial governments really want to help workers, they should cut taxes and regulations to make labour markets more competitive, and not make it harder for workers to find and keep jobs.

Love C2C Journal? Here's how you can help us grow.

More for you

From the Strait of Hormuz to Cuba, Net Zero is Dying – Mark Carney Needs to Let Go

After decades spent pursuing net-zero dreams at great cost to their economies and social fabric, most of the world’s industrialized nations are waking back up. War with Iran and the threat of tanker blockades have everyone worried about oil and natural gas supplies and clamouring for energy security. Or nearly everyone. Not Mark Carney, though. Canada’s prime minister keeps pushing industrial carbon taxes higher and insists on wasting taxpayers’ money on windmills that make no difference. Gwyn Morgan recalls his own observation of the global warming movement’s original rise, its morphing into the radical “net zero” cult – and its spectacular global disintegration. It is high time, Morgan writes, that Canadians demand Carney also drop his delusions.

Busted Flush: Why Your Next Mayor Should Be an Engineer

You drag yourself out of bed for your morning coffee, but the faucet’s dry. And the toilet won’t flush. It’s going to be a really bad day. Beneath our cities lie massive webs of pipes delivering water and removing sewage. They are crucial to our daily lives. But as Greg Wilson reveals, they have been scandalously overlooked and underfunded across Canada. The City of Calgary, C2C Journal found out, has even skimmed more than $1 billion from its ratepayer-funded water utility to spend on other programs. With a spate of recent failures bringing attention to the condition of our local water services, Wilson argues for a dramatic change in priorities at city hall: drop the social engineering and put real engineers in charge.

We Have Ways of Making You Talk: The Tyranny of Land Acknowledgements and Other Compelled Speech

Indigenous land acknowledgements have become so common that many Canadians no longer give them a second thought – simply accepting a kind of tuneless new national anthem before events of all sorts. And that’s why they’re so dangerous. The enforced conformity and compelled speech they depend on are not just threats to individual freedom, writes George Ramsay, they also create a divisive moral hierarchy based on race. In this originally reported story, Ramsay delves into the dangers posed by Canada’s broader shift to enforced verbal compliance, reveals the inspiring stories of a few brave souls who have dared to challenge this social tyranny and offers practical tips on how the rest of us can fight back too.

More from this author

Suffer the Little Children: The Liberals’ $10-a-Day Childcare Disaster

Waiting lists stretching years. Plummeting quality. Outraged parents. Providers slowly strangled by red tape. The federal Liberals’ vaunted $10-a-day childcare program has proved an expensive disaster. Five years in, Matthew Lau digs into the many problems and inequities this landmark social policy has delivered. Lau finds B.C., which had a three-year head start on the rest of the country and an enthusiastic NDP government leading the way, in the worst straits of all. With an irretrievably flawed system clearly failing Canadian families, Lau argues that Prime Minister Mark Carney should pivot to a fairer, cheaper and more effective alternative.

Let Free Markets Reign: How Capitalism Protects Workers, Consumers and the Environment

It has become widely accepted that capitalism has failed – that free markets exploit workers, hammer consumers and can’t be trusted as the bedrock of a liberal democracy. It’s why an unrepentant “democratic” socialist, Zohran Mamdani, can be elected mayor of New York and why Mark Carney can produce a budget with massive spending and increased government meddling yet still be hailed as a prudent manager. Matthew Lau isn’t having it. In this incisive critique, Lau demolishes four myths driving the modern attack on capitalism and explains how it is only free markets that make people richer, happier and more equal.

Something to Cry About: The Disastrous Rollout of Canada’s $10-a-Day Childcare

Low prices and high volumes can be a successful business model in the right hands. Just think Costco or Walmart. But should anyone trust government to pull off such a strategy? As the early returns on the Trudeau Liberals’ $10-a-day childcare program reveal, Ottawa is utterly incapable of delivering on such a promise. While offering childcare at a fraction of its true cost has led to a massive increase in demand, the country is now beset by disastrous childcare shortages and ever-lengthening waiting lists. In fact, more parents are looking after their own kids at home now than was the case in 2019. As Matthew Lau reports, there’s a solution to Canada’s childcare supply woes, but the Liberals refuse to consider it.