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BusinessAnalysis

World watching as Canada casts aside austerity and gambles on a fiscal surge

The great debate is part politics and part economics. It has been going on for years: whether the best path to prosperity is to cut back on government spending or open the floodgates. The world will be watching the experiment, says Don Pittis, and Canadians will be the laboratory rats.

A global economic debate plays out in Canada as our government goes from miser to spendthrift

Canada's Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Finance Minister Bill Morneau are taking Canada into unknown waters, betting that spending will do what austerity has not. (Reuters)

Canada has abruptly switched sides in one ofthe perennial political and economic battles over how to restarta sagging economy.

To put it in a way that would not please either side, it is the contestbetween the misers and the spendthrifts. After years of the penny-pinching approach, Canadahas switched tack to become a big spender.

And despite some very strong feelings on either side, it is not absolutely clear which is the rightpath to prosperity. The world will be watching.

The clashover the bestway to boost a moribund economy is by no means solelya Canadian argument. Nor is it justa modern debate.

Historical debate

Countries from China and Japan, to Greece and Ireland have taken different views on the subject.

Historically, the dispute has arisen repeatedlynotably duringthe Great Depression, when the first response of austerity was blamed for making the problem worse. But when governments then altered strategy, new spending failed to lead to a miracle recovery.

Despite monetary stimulus and negative interest rates, Japan's economy has lapsed into deflation and economic stagnation. (Reuters)

There is plenty of evidence on both sides. As I noted back in 2010, Japan and Ireland backedopposing strategies. But the countries' circumstances are so different it is hard to declare adefinitive winner.

China and Greeceswitched sides. Greece was driven by the ballot box toward bigger spending, then restrained by their stern European central bankers. China facedalternating worries, first cutting back on fears ofoverheating and then suddenly spurring new spending on fears of fallinggrowth.

While Greek unions protest in the streets, the goverment has adopted an austerity-led strategy, including selling of government assets, under pressure from their European bankers. (Reuters)

Canada is a special case. It's an example of a country that, following an election, consciously changed from one strategy to the other when they tossed out the Conservative government of Stephen Harperand elected the Liberals under Justin Trudeau.

"This budget is a nightmare scenario for taxpayers who will be forced to pick up the tab for today's Liberal spending spree," said Harper's interim replacement as party leader,RonaAmbrose.

Ambrose and her Conservatives still back what you might call the Irish model. During their 10 years in power, the Harper government cut taxes, both for business and for the population at large. And with revenues depleted by tax cuts, it began paring down government spending to make expenditures match income.

Austerity's intuitive appeal

The austerity argument has a lot of intuitive appeal. If your family gets into financial trouble, the wisest strategy is to hunker down, cut back on spending andget everyone out looking for work.

Besides the analogy to family finances, another argument once called liberal or neo-liberal, now usually known as conservative says the best way for governments to solve economic problems is to get out of the way and let the forces of business and market economics find a solution.

As with any real-life economics, doing double-blind tests to discover the truth doesn't work. In Canada, the strategy of government austerity and business-led recovery did not have a good result,although things may have been different if had been tried at a different time.
During last year's election, the Conservatives campaigned against government spending, saying it would cost business owners if the Liberals were elected. (Reuters)

As it was, the private-sector economy spurred by tax breaks and directed by market forces pouredthe country's wealth and human capitalinto a resources boom just as the boomturned to bust.

Private-sector investment in the economy began to dry up.

In Tuesday's budget speech marking the change of direction, Finance Minister Bill Morneau harked back to an earlier time.

"After the dark days of the Great Depression and the Second World War, Canadians believed the future could be brighter," he said, pointing out that post-war government spending on roads, shipping and communication systemsmade the economy grow and prosper.

Perhaps so, but most economists say the recovery from the Great Depression was not based on insipid attempts to boost peacetimespending, but the massive borrowing and spending boom of the global war effort itself. Itwas a simultaneousmixture of personal austerity and government spending on the war machine.

Post-war comparison

It is not at all clear that the near $30-billion deficit, and the $120 billion worth of infrastructure spending promised over the coming years, large as they seem, areenough to restart the country's economic engine in a similar way.

It is also not obvious that the new strategywill have the same effect as the "Greatest Generation" returningfrom warto rebuild the country after some 15 years of consumer privation.

But compared to the techniquesother countries have tried in attempting to push their economies back into growth, it is not so crazy.

Monetary policy has not proveditself. There are growing fears that negative interest rates create new dangers.

Reports in the foreign press from those that noticed are mildly supportive of the switch. Economics columnists have frequently recommended fiscal stimulus, and even cash handouts calledhelicopter money,to break Europe out of a cycle ofdeflation and negative real interest rates.

Just like the business-led austerity plan that came before, the new strategy is a living experiment with Canadians as the laboratory rats. Just as in the previous experiment, the results may depend on many outside factors beyond the current government's control.

If it works, Trudeau and his finance minister will be heralded for their genius. If it doesn't, there will be no shortage ofpeople ready to say "I told you so."

Follow Don on Twitter@don_pittis

More analysisby Don Pittis