Quote:
Originally Posted by IntenseFan
I'd like to briefly address how I see the infrastructure deficit that has come up so many times in this thread.
Is there an infrastructure deficit in Alberta for things like roads, schools hospitals, etc.? Yes.
How did this occur? A lot of people are convinced that it occured because of the Klein cuts in the mid-90s. While it's true that this caused the infrastructure deficit to manifest more quickly, it did not cause it. What caused it was likely a huge influx of population into Alberta since the 1970s, which continues on and off to this day (mostly on) and in particular the increase of that population in Alberta's urban areas;
What has exacerbated it significantly is Alberta governments spending completely beyond their means in an ultimately self defeating attempt to manage the influx of population, particularly in urban areas.
Any government dealing with a huge influx of population is going to end up running an infrastructure deficit. Is that good? Of course not. What's worse is a government spending totally beyond its means to try and deal with it. That might keep us ahead of the curve for a little while, but eventually when such deficit financing begins to crush the provincial budgets (like they did by the 90s and will again soon) the government of the day will be forced to either pay dangerous amounts to keep borrowing (unfeasible in the long term) or cut back on such spending (the Klein route).
I am one of those people who dosen't think Klein really had any choice. We couldn't continue to borrow and spend, borrow and spend until up to 50% of the provincial budget was being spent on interest.
Unfortunately, the cuts caused the already present infrastructure deficit to manifest more significantly than the borrow and spend approach. However, that approach was also ultimately doomed to fail in any event.
Long story short, there is an infrastructure deficit, but it is ultimately self defeating in the long term to spend beyond our means to attempt to control it. How then do you deal with it? That is an extremely hard question. In the end, you may have to deal with it as best you can, spend what you can afford and make good investments.
To my mind, we simply cannot be so shortsighted as to overspend to fight the infrastrucutre deficit when we know that only buys time and creates a more significant problem down the road. Particularly so in this Province, where we have a non-renewable source of energy funding a singificant amount of genera; revenue that is going to dry up one day.
This is why I am opposed to fighting the infrastructure deficit by borrowing. Unfortunately, I see the PCs as being the party that will continue to employ this strategy. Arguably they are the ones who caused it, thanks to the Getty days of huge deficits. There is every reason to believe, particulary based on their budget and their campaign promises thus far, that is the tactic they will take.
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^ A good post, but you failed to provide any real solutions. Simply "spending what you can afford" is not good enough and will result in you losing the next election (classrooms with 50 kids and 12 hour average emergency wait times will do that to a government).
I think borrowing to address the most dire needs is a good thing, but it's all about balance and making the tough decisions regarding what is actually a "need" and what is a "want that will get us re-elected". Unfortunately, the larger issue here is that average Joe doesn't care about debt loads, he just wants his own life to be as comfortable as possible and will vote for whoever he feels will make that happen....regardless of how it gets done.