BC has lost it’s bragging rights economically.
New forecasts by TD and RBC put BC at the very bottom of economic growth.
People have slowed spending, businesses are not investing, and the construction and manufacturing industries are in free fall decline.
So what’s happening to cause this?
British Columbians have slowed spending as the cost of living in BC has skyrocketed.
Once called the “sunshine tax”, residents can no longer afford the highest real estate costs in Canada, the highest grocery costs, the greatest inflation in Canada, or the “made-in-NDP-BC” carbon tax that is costing the most of any province in Canada, and giving the least back.
Yes, interest rates have had an effect, but not as much as the rental rates or inflation.
What are people doing? Leaving BC.
The outward migration from BC is the highest it has been in a decade. In Q2 and Q3 of 2022, over 23,000 people left BC and went to Alberta.
This is not about jobs. Our unemployment rate is very low.
But a concerning pattern has emerged: private sector job creation in BC is languishing while public sector (government) payrolls continue to expand rapidly.
This situation paints a disconcerting picture for the future of our province's fiscal sustainability. Without a thriving and growing private sector, maintaining a burgeoning public sector becomes an untenable proposition.
And this is not just since COVID. This imbalance between private and public sector job growth is not a recent anomaly.
Between 2019 and the first quarter of 2023, private sector employment in BC saw a pitiful growth of only 1.2%, while the rest of Canada enjoyed a more robust increase of 6.6%.
So why aren’t businesses hiring or investing more?
Some would contend that because the NDP government has expanded so greatly, there are less people
available to work in the private sector.
The growth of the government public sector is massive in BC. While government has grown by 30% over the last years, have government services increased or become more efficient by 30%?
That’s a rhetorical question because we all know the answer.
Others would look to the incredible pressures that BC businesses are under including: substantial hikes
in payroll taxes like Employer Health Tax ( EHT ), increased corporate tax rates, a continually escalating carbon tax, and significant minimum wage increases.
It is possible that these tax and cost increases, mandated by government policy, are now curbing private sector hiring activity.
Furthermore, we have seen a shift in government policy.
The NDP have forecasted a 30% decrease in the forestry sector, which shows in the latest job numbers.
Manufacturing was plunging. These job losses are in direct response to NDP policy and have, so far, not been replaced by the private sector in other areas.
And that is why RBC puts our growth at last in the country. People are leaving, businesses are no longer investing, and costs have skyrocketed.
We stand at a critical juncture in BC's economic journey.
Addressing these issues is not a task for the faint-hearted. It requires thoughtful analysis, proactive policy changes, and a commitment to nurturing a balanced economy that allows both public and private sectors to flourish.
You don’t have to look past your street to see the richness of BC. Our resources are growing all around us. Furthermore, we are entrepreneurial and innovative. But we have lost that edge.
If we don’t get it back, our economy will continue to shrink.
My question to you is this: How do you think the we should turn around our shrinking BC economy?
I love hearing from you and I read every email.
Please email me at Renee.Merrifield.MLA@leg.bc.ca or call the office at 250-712-3620.
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