Title: THE FEDERAL SPENDING POWER:
1- THE FEDERAL SPENDING POWER
- Practices, Principles, Perspectives
- by
- Thomas J Courchene
- tom.courchene_at_queensu.ca
- IIGR and IRPP
- Slides for a Presentation to
- OPEN FEDERALISM AND THE SPENDING POWER
- A Symposium Sponsored by
- Queens Institute of Intergovernmental Relations
- Queens Law School
- January 25-26, 2008
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2Outline
- Spending power challenge is two-fold i) provide
protection against arbitrary and/or unwanted
federal intrusion in areas of exclusive
provincial jurisdiction, and ii) be flexible
enough to allow provinces to work with Ottawa
(including upward delegation) when they so wish. - Part II Canadian Policies and Practice
- Quebecs PIT, UI/EI, CPP/QPP, EPF, CEU, Tax
Harmonization, 1995 Budget, Martins Fiscal
Cafeteria, CCTB, Pharmacare, Healthcare, Open
Federalism - Part III Evolution of Spending Power Principles
- Constitution Act 1867, Treaty Power, Early
Trudeau, Later Trudeau, Equalization, Meech,
Charlottetown, Calgary Declaration, SUFA - Part IV Meta Perspectives
- Deux Nations, Networked Federalism, National
Interest, Cities - Part V Options weak and incomplete
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3Canadian Practice The 1954 Quebec PIT
- Ottawa offers federal grants to universities
- Duplessis realizes Quebec has no revenue source
to offset Federal spending power (Henceforth
FSP) relating to PSE. - Creates Tremblay Royal Commission on Fiscal
Relations to introduce Quebecs PIT as
countervail - LESSON Spending power issue is inherently about
revenue supremacy. In recent years, this is what
the Séguin Commission was all about. - Implications i) led to tax sharing (rather than
tax rental) agreements and the decentralization
of the PIT ii) led to the equalization program. - Also led to major change in spending power
approach. Up to 1954 Ottawa financed, regulated,
and administered programs in exclusive provincial
jurisdiction (UI, family allowances, pensions),
usually via constitutional amendment). After
1954, all future programs were shared cost with
provincial administration. - Quebecs PIT was a watershed in the evolution of
both the exercise of the federal spending power
and of Social Canada
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4Canadian Practice UI and the FSP
- UI became federal in 1940. Therefore, UI does not
constitute an exercise of the FSP because it is
in federal jurisdiction - However, Ottawa arguably used UI/EI to operate in
provincial jurisdiction in areas like parental
leave and training. Recently the feds have
transferred responsibility for parental leave
back to Quebec. - One benefit of this may be that Ottawa, via
UI/EI, introduced state-of-the-art social policy
that can now be transferred back to the provinces
or left with Ottawa as the provinces wish - Lesson Programs in federal jurisdiction can also
be deployed to operate in areas of provincial
jurisdiction -
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5Canadian Practice CPP/QPP and the FSP
- Section 94A (1964) made public compulsory
pensions Concurrent With Provincial Paramountcy
(CWPP) - Quebec exercised paramountcy to mount QPP
- Ends up being similar to s.94 spirit all common
law provinces transfer power upward. Quebec
remains put. - Lesson Why do we say Quebec is opting out here?
It has paramountcy in this area. Rest of Canada
has OPTED IN! - Lesson 2 Might something like CWPP be an
approach to the FSP. Would allow opting in and
opting out, as it were - It is intriguing or at least consistent that,
given the similarity of the CPP/QPP process to
the spirit of s. 94, its section is 94A
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6Shared Cost Programs EPF and CAP
- EPF and CAP were all 50-50 shared cost programs
(although individually quite different in terms
of the 50-50) - Initially, and intriguingly, the provinces were
able by their spending to trigger the FSP. Block
funding stopped this. - Over time the conditions were relaxed to allow
more autonomy. This movement toward unconditional
grants effectively enhances provincial powers - Equalization allowed all provinces to be on a
more level playing field in terms of funding
these programs - Lesson The genius inherent in the exercise of
the FSP here was that it allowed the provinces to
run these programs which, with federal co-funding
and CEU provisions, effectively became national
programs.
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7Canadian Practice the CEU and the FSP
- Because of s.92, our trade and commerce clause
has been read less expansively than US and
Australia interstate commerce clauses - Pursuing a thoroughgoing CEU could be quite
centralizing since almost every provincial policy
affects the CEU - Ottawa has used the CEU issue to curtail
provincial demands (in the 1980-82 negotiations
and in recent Finance documents). - Reliance on s.91(2) is problematical to the
provinces because Ottawa would not be bound (on
EI, for example) - AIT has two problems at least needs to be able
to be triggered by citizens, and needs to be
binding on provinces. - Lesson Citizens want a CEU (and CSU) and if
provinces do not deliver this, then citizens will
insist that Ottawa will - The BC and Alberta TILMA may be a good start here
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8Tax Harmonization and the FSP
- The FPS has given Canada (and especially ROC) a
decentralized yet harmonized tax system. Is a
model for decentralized federations - Ottawa collects the provincial PIT free of charge
provided that the provinces adopt federal
definitions for income and abide by the
MacEachen guidelines for tax credits,
surcharges, etc - On the CIT side all provinces agree to assign
profits of multi-province corporations in terms
of an agreed formula. Provinces can also
piggy-back on federal CIT (and 7 do) - GST/PST issue remains a problem
- Quebec has its own PIT again it is ROC that has
opted in to be with the federal system, and not
Quebec that has opted out. - Lesson Ottawa has successfully employed the
spending power in the service of the Canadian tax
union while simultaneously enhancing provincial
tax flexibility and autonomy
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9The 1995 Budget and the Federal Savings Power
- After a series of caps and freezes to cash
transfers, the 1995 federal budget unloaded the
savings power on the provinces, with the new
CHST to be cut by 6 billion - This budget was also a watershed in terms of the
FPS. First, the deficit downloading was part of a
package of initiatives that led to a
near-decade-long set of federal surpluses, and a
major fiscal balance in Ottawas favour. - Second, this downloading and the continuing
demands of Medicare led to a situation where the
provinces were cash-starved across the board and
even demanding the FSP. - This was the perfect storm for the FSP the
provinces demanding cash and Ottawa more than
willing to supply - This set the stage for the spectacular FSP binge
(much of it in the form of bilateral deals)
orchestrated by Prime Minister Martincities, day
care, infrastructure, equalization health, i.e.,
the fiscal cafeteria as The Economist noted
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10More on Martins Fiscal Cafeteria
- What are the lessons here?
- Were the provinces so cash-strapped that they
signed any and every federal deal, or were we
witnessing ROC expressing a desire to work much
more closely with Ottawa to create national
programs? Probably some of both - Were citizens on side? My guess is yes.
- This re-enforces the two-fold approach to the
spending power elaborated earlier -- ensuring
protection against unwarranted intrusions in
areas of exclusive provincial jurisdiction and,
in the spirit of s. 94 providing flexibility to
allow provincial-initiated (and perhaps
federal-initiated) fed-prov collaboration
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11The Report to Premiers, the APCs and the CCTB
- The provinces response to the 1995 budget was to
revitalize the Annual Premiers Conference and to
commission the impressive Report to Premiers
(Quebec had observer status). One of its
recommendations led to the CCTB (Canada Child Tax
Benefit). - This was a very federalism friendly program.
Provinces could reduce spending on welfare
benefits provided that they re-deployed the money
for low-income families. This may be a
sufficiently flexible approach to try to
replicate in other areas - It appears that with the CCTB there is a de facto
re-allocation of roles Ottawa looks after the
kids and the elderly while provinces are
responsible for adults (Ottawa even gives
training to the provinces) - With the election of Jean Charest in 2003, the
APC becomes the Council of the Federation (COF),
with addressing fiscal imbalance as its initial
priority -
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12The COF Pharamacare
- At the (July, 2004) post-federal-election meeting
of the COF, the provinces offer responsibility
for pharmacare to Ottawa. - The COF was unanimous that Quebec would keep its
program - It is understood hat Quebec will maintain its
own program and receive a comparable compensation
for the program put in place by the federal
government. - This is ROC opting in, ? la s. 94, but with a new
twist compensation for Quebec maintaining its
own program - Lesson If the FSP issue is defined in terms of a
deux-nations issue, then this approach may be
compromise needed. But this will probably not sit
well with all ROC provinces.
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13The 2004 FMM Healthcare Agreement
- The Sept. 2004 First Ministers Meeting (FMM),
led to a 10-year, 41 billion healthcare
agreement. - This too appeared as a deux nations approach
because while Quebec would collaborate with
others, its own policies would be determined in
accordance with the objectives, standards, and
criteria established by the relevant Quebec
authorities (from the FMM addendum Asymmetric
Federalism that Respects Quebecs Jurisdiction).
- In the final countdown to the deal, Ottawa
verbally agreed that Alberta and BC (and by
extension all provinces) could have the same deal
as Quebec. This is in line with the Calgary
Declaration, as will be elaborated. - Since no other province has acted on this, it may
be along the lines of de jure symmetry but de
facto asymmetry
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14Harpers Open Federalism and the FSP
- This tour dhorizon of Canadian policy/practice
concludes with Harpers une chartre du
fédéralisme douverture. - This is defined to include
- A recognition and respect for the constitutional
division of powers - A recognition that there exist a fiscal imbalance
in the federation - A commitment to redress this fiscal imbalance
- A related commitment to rein in the federal
spending power - A commitment to work with the COF to improve the
management and workings of the federation - And, on a more political note, a commitment to
halt the domineering and paternalistic
federalism of the Chrétien-Martin Liberals. - The challenge is to design frameworks that can
deliver this - The analysis now addresses the evolution of
principles relating to the FSP.
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15PRINCIPLES RELATING TO THE FSPCONSTITUTION ACT,
1867 s. 94
- S.94 Uniformity of Laws in ON, NS, and NB
- Notwithstanding anything in this Act, the
Parliament of Canada may make Provision for the
Uniformity of all or any of the Laws relative to
Property and Civil Rights in Ontario, Nova
Scotia, and New Brunswick, and of the Procedure
of all or any of the Courts in those Three
Provinces, and from and after the passing of any
Act in that Behalf of the Parliament of Canada to
make laws in relation to any Matter comprised in
any such Act shall, notwithstanding anything is
this Act, be unrestricted but any Act of the
Parliament of Canada making Provision for such
Uniformity shall not have effect in any Province
unless and until it is adopted and enacted as Law
by the Legislature thereof. - Frank Scott suggested that, unable to secure a
legislative union, this provision was inserted to
allow the common law provinces to pursue a more
uniform future. Quebec would not be able to veto
this. - Sam LeSalva notes that it should have been
entitled Transferring Constitutional
Jurisdiction, to make it clear that it is in
fact an amending procedure. - As noted, the CPP/QPP and the 2004 pharmacare
proposal are in the spirit of s.94. This section
is relatively unused, if not viewed as a dead
letter. It merits reconsideration in the context
of open federalism/FSP
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16Principles Relating to the FSPThe Treaty Power
and the Division of Powers
- Can the central government, simply through the
exercise of its capacity in the field of foreign
relations, significantly alter what otherwise
would be the constitutional division of powers? - Greg Craven notes that in Australia, the answer
is yes - the federal balance achieved by the Constitution
is now at the mercy of the treaty making powers
of the federal executive. (1993,22) - However, in Canada, pursuant to the Labour
Conventions Case in 1937 while the government
can enter into any international obligations they
wish, they can implement only those obligations
only as far as they are matters of federal
constitutional responsibility (D. Wilkinson,
1993,208) - Might this be revisited in this increasingly
globalized environment?
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17Principles Relating to the FSPEarly Trudeau,
1969
- From 1969 FMC, Trudeau tabled the following
(Watts,1999) - the federal spending power should formally be
entrenched in the constitution - Parliament should have an unrestricted power to
make conditional grants to provincial governments
for the purpose of supporting their programs and
public services and - Parliaments power to initiate cost-shared
programs involving conditional grants in areas of
provincial jurisdiction should require both a
broad national consensus ... and a per capita
reimbursement of the people (not the government)
of a province whose legislature decided not to
participate. - This would come close to importing the Australian
approach to its spending power. Specifically,
s.95 of the Australian constitution states that
Parliament may grant financial assistance to any
State on such terms and conditions as Parliament
thinks fit. - Since Quebec has never accepted the
constitutionality of the federal spending power
(Telford, 2003,4), there was no chance that
formal entrenchment of the spending power in this
form would find acceptance.
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18Principles Relating to the FSPLater Trudeau,
1978-79
- A more acceptable approach from the Trudeau
government emerged a decade later in the context
of the 1978-79 constitutional discussion with the
provinces. - Again from Watts (1999,2) ... the exercise of
the federal spending power would have been made
subject to a provincial consent mechanism (a
majority of provinces with a majority of the
population), with unconditional compensation for
non-participating provinces (though there was no
agreement on whether compensation was to be paid
to non-participating provincial governments or
directly to their residents). - While enshrining this version would also have
created problems for Quebec, one should note that
this was part of a best efforts draft relating
to overall constitutional change that was much
more province-friendly than what resulted,
post-Referendum, from Trudeaus promise of a
renewed federalism. - En route to the final agreement in 1980-82, the
gang of eight (all provinces except Ontario and
New Brunswick) proposed that the overall
Patriation package include a provision whereby a
province would be able to opt out from federal
programs with full compensation. Although this
proposal fell by the wayside, the concept of
opting out with full compensation would
resurface on several later occasions. What did
become enshrined were the s.36 equalization
principles, which have FSP implications .
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19Principles Relating to the FSPConstitution Act
1982 Section 36 (Equalization)
- 36. (1) Without altering the legislative
authority of Parliament or of the provincial
legislatures, or the rights of any of them with
respect to the exercise of their legislative
authority, Parliament and the legislatures,
together with the government of Canada and the
provincial governments, are committed to - (a) promoting equal opportunities for the
well-being of Canadians - (b) furthering economic development to reduce
disparity in opportunities and - (c) providing essential public services of
reasonable quality to all Canadians. - 36. (2) Parliament and the government of Canada
are committed to the principle of making
equalization payments to ensure that provincial
governments have sufficient revenues to provide
reasonably comparable levels of public services
at reasonably comparable levels of taxation. - While the generally-accepted view is that s.36 is
non-justiciable, it nonetheless does provide
constitutional underpinning for the exercise of
the spending power to achieve provincial fiscal
adequacy and equity (s.36(2)) and to promote
equality of opportunity and access to public
services for individual Canadians (s.36(1)).
More on this latter role in the later reference
to SUFA.
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20Principles Relating to the FSPMeech Lake
Accord 1987-90
- The Meech Lake Accord was intended to become
enshrined in a Constitution Act, 1987 and it
represented the first attempt to limit the
federal spending power consitutionally (Telford,
2003,38). Section 106A was to read as follows - 106A. (1) The Government of Canada shall provide
reasonable compensation to the government of a
province that chooses not to participate in a
national shared-cost program that is established
by the Government of Canada after the coming into
force of this section in an area of exclusive
provincial jurisdiction, if the province carries
on a program or initiative that is compatible
with the national objectives. - Telford (2003, 38-8) notes that Premier Robert
Bourassa was comfortable with this wording
because (quoting Bourassa) the new section 106A
is drafted so that it speaks solely of the right
to opt out, without either recognition or
defining the federal spending power ... so Quebec
keeps the right to contest before the courts any
unconstitutional use of the spending power.
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21Principles Relating to the FSPCharlottetown
Agreement
- A provision should be added to the Constitution
stipulating that the Government of Canada must
provide reasonable compensation to the government
of a province that chooses not to participate in
a new Canada-wide shared-cost program that is
established by the federal government in an area
of exclusive provincial jurisdiction, if that
province carries on a program or initiative that
is compatible with the national objectives. - A framework should be developed to guide the use
of the federal spending power in all areas of
exclusive provincial jurisdiction. Once
developed, the framework could become a
multilateral agreement that would receive
constitutional protection. The framework should
ensure that when the federal spending power is
used in areas of exclusive provincial
jurisdiction, it should - (a) contribute to the pursuit of national
objectives - (b) reduce overlap and duplication
- (c) not distort and should respect provincial
priorities and - (d) ensure equality of treatment of the
provinces, while recognizing their different
needs and circumstances.
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22Principles Relating to the FSPThe Calgary
Declaration
- The provinces way of reaching out to Quebec after
the 1995 Referendum took the form of the Calgary
Declaration. This declaration was signed by all
provinces (except Quebec, in large measure
because this was to be a message to Quebec). The
Calgary Declaration was then taken back to each
of the nine provinces for further consultation
and discussion and was eventually (1998) given
assent in all nine provincial legislatures, in
several cases with considerable fanfare. Of the
7 articles of the Declaration, three are of
important for present purposes - 5. In Canadas federal system, where respect for
diversity and equality underlies unity, the
unique character of Quebec society, including its
French speaking majority, its culture and its
tradition of civil law, is fundamental to the
well being of Canada. Consequently, the
legislature and Government of Quebec have a role
to protect and develop the unique character of
Quebec society within Canada - 6. If any future constitutional amendment
confers powers on one province, these powers must
be available to all provinces. - 7. Canada is a federal system where federal,
provincial, and territorial governments work in
partnership while respecting each others
jurisdictions. Canadians want their governments
to work cooperatively and with flexibility to
ensure the efficiency and effectiveness of the
federation. Canadians want their governments to
work together particularly in the delivery of
their social programs. Provinces and territories
renew their commitment to work in partnership
with the Government of Canada to best serve the
needs of Canadians.
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23Principles Relating to the FSPThe Calgary
Declaration 2
- Article 5 represents a formal recognition on the
part of the provinces that Quebec is a distinct
society. - Article 6 allows Ottawa to make bilateral deals
with any province (but clearly this was written
within Quebec in mind) which could then become
multilateral. Again this is de jure symmetry but
perhaps de facto asymmetry - Ron Watts (1999,4-5) notes that Article 7 has
acknowledged the interdependence of governments
and called for more cooperation between the
difference orders of government in their
respective jurisdictions, pointing implicitly to
the significance of the federal spending power.
To the extent that this is so, it is important to
note that these nine provinces are speaking about
Quebec in article 5 and probably article 6 as
well. But they are not speaking for Quebec in
article 7 since Quebec is not a signatory.
Rather, in 7, these are the common-law provinces
speaking, ? la s.94. My guess is that the Calgary
Declaration influenced the 2004 pharmacare
proposal, which in turn is in the spirit of s.94.
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24SUFA Canada-Wide Initiatives Supported by
Transfers to Provinces and Territories
- The Government of Canada will
- .36. Work collaboratively with all provincial
and territorial governments to identify
Canada-wide priorities and objectives - 37. Not introduce such new initiatives without
the agreement of a majority of provincial
governments. - 38. Each provincial and territorial government
will determine the detailed program design and
mix best suited to its own needs and
circumstances to meet the agreed objectives. - 39. A provincial/territorial government which,
because of its existing programming, does not
require the total transfers to fulfill the agreed
objectives would be able to reinvest any funds
not required for those objectives in the same or
a related priority area. - 40. The Government of Canada and the
provincial/territorial governments will agree on
an accountability framework for such new social
initiatives and investment - 41. All provincial and territorial governments
that meet or commit to meet the agreed
Canada-wide objectives and agree to respect the
accountability framework will receive their share
of available funding. - Some have raised concerns that in terms of
section 37, Ottawa could go ahead with a
shared-cost program which was opposed by Ontario,
Quebec, BC and Alberta. Indeed, the more likely
scenario, as Tom Kent (2007) has noted, is that
we may never see another major shared cost
program because Ottawa would have little
incentive to spend federal money on a presumed
pan-Canadian program that would allow opting out
by the four largest provinces. In a sense,
therefore, the SUFA approach to the traditional
spending power may have gone too far in
accommodating opting out of federal programs.
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25SUFA 2 Direct Federal Spending
- From SUFA
- 42a. Another use of the federal spending power is
making transfers to individuals and to
organizations in order to promote equality of
opportunity, mobility, and other Canada-wide
objectives. - At one level, this can be viewed as a rather
straightforward attempt to make operational some
of the principles contained in s.36(1) of the
Constitution Act, 1982. - In general, one could anticipate that the
exercise of this direct federal spending would
appeal to a broad majority of Canadians (as will
be elaborated in Tom Kents paper). - However, the exercise of the direct spending
power would clearly be anathema to Quebec. That
this is so should be rather obvious since it was
an exercise of this direct spending power in the
form of federal grants to universities that
triggered the Quebec PIT and Quebecs FSP
concerns in the first place
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26Addressing the FSP Meta Perspectives
- There is a wealth of Canadian practice and
principle to draw upon (and much comparative
experience as well), in addressing the FSP
challenges - The first task, however, is to recognize that
there are other perspectives that need to be
brought to bear on designing an approach to the
spending power. Not all of these will be
compatible with open federalism. Among them are - The deux-nations approach (which has already been
alluded to) - Networked Federalism
- Cities and the spending power
- The National-Interest/Provincial-Jurisdiction
Nexus - Attention is then directed to the alternative
approaches to the design of spending power
instruments
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27Meta Perspectives Deux Nations
- For Quebecers, Quebec is their nation and Canada
is their state. For ROC, Ottawa is (typically)
the embodiment of both nation and state. - Therefore, nation stuff (social envelope,
property and civil rights) stays at the province
level in Quebec, whereas ROC may want
pan-Canadian programs. - It is important to remember that property and
rights was assigned to Quebec in 1774 Quebec
Act. - If the goal is to satisfy both conceptions of
nation, the way forward is for asymmetrical
treatment for Quebec, perhaps in the spirit of
s.94 - This is why the pharmacare proposal is so
intriguing. ROC must have realized two things i)
because of the SUFA possibility for the large
provinces to opt out, the initiative had to come
frorm ROC and had to be inclusive in order to
interest Ottawa, and ii) ROC recognized that
Quebec would need to run its own program. This
approach will work as long as the programs fall
under the Nationhood rubric. - However, if the issues at stake are more along
the decentralization lines, then several ROC
provinces will want to be treated equivalently to
Quebec, so more symmetric options will be needed.
-
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28Meta Perspectives Networked Federalism
- The network is the dominant and pervasive
organizational form in the Information Age. This
has led Janice Stein to propose Networked
Federalism. From Stein - the federal project in Canada is not to
disentangle overlapping jurisdictions. It is to
acknowledge complexity and to pull on the best
from the private, voluntary, and public sectors
to create shared policy space across levels of
government for new ideas, feedback, and
correction - Although networks have existed for centuries, the
revolution in information and communications
technology enabled them to proliferate and grow.
They are only now becoming socially important
because of their comparative advantage in
handling the large volumes of information that
flow around the world at unprecedented speed. - the most serious obstacle to networked federalism
is the deeply embedded political culture of
rights and entitlements of both orders of
government and their emphasis on control. our
challenge is not another round of constitutional
design, but a shift in culture to accommodate
networked politics. - This harkens back to Carl Friedrichs view that
federalism is the process of adopting joint
policies and making joint decisions on joint
problems
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29Meta Perspectives National Interest /
Provincial Jurisdiction 1
- The new societal order is privileging knowledge
and human capital in much the same way as the
Industrial Revolution privileged physical capital - From Lester Thurow
- If capital is borrowable, raw materials are
buyable and technology is copyable, what are you
left with if you want to run a high wage economy?
only skills, there isnt anything else! - Given that knowledge and human capital are
critical to - Competitiveness and wealth creation
- Enhancing living standards
- Addressing cohesion and income distribution, it
follows that - Ottawa has to become involved in areas like PSE,
early child development, etc., and aspects of
health because they are in the national interest,
even though they are largely under provincial
jurisdiction (henceforth NI/PJ)
30Meta Perspectives NI / PJ Global Cities
- Cities (especially global city regions, GCRs)
have become the dynamic motors of the global and
national economies - They are the centres of dense concentrations of
human capital, RD, high-value added services,
which allows them to become national nodes in the
networks that drive growth, trade and innovation.
- From Simon Frasers Rick Harris
- Canadas future in terms of productivity, growth
and living standards will depend how well our
GCRs will fare against US and international GCRs - Again, Ottawa has to become involved even though
Canadas cities are constitutionless, i.e.,
creatures of the provinces. Once again, a
national-interest/provincial-jurisdiction (NI/PJ)
dilemma - Arguably, GCRs need to become more integrated
into the processes of fiscal and political
federalism
31Options for FSP for programs in provincial areas
Revitalizing s.94
- Would be a constitutional approach the FSP
- Template legislation passed by participating
govts - Would accommodate ROC opting into policy
uniformity - Has deux nations feature, (allows Quebec to
maintain own program, or to legislate similar
program if it wishes). - Could be triggered by ROC or by Ottawa
- Problems
- Can legislation be changed
- Is it reversible
- Can Quebec get in if it wishes
- Compensation if not in?
- How does one ensure that these considerations are
part of the revitalization of s.94?
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32Options for FSP for programs in provincial areas
A Non-Constitutional Approach
- Possible text, from Throne Speech guided by
our federalism of openness, our Government will
introduce legislation to place formal limits on
the use of the federal spending power for new
shared-cost programs in areas of exclusive
provincial jurisdiction. This legislation will
allow provinces and territories to opt out with
reasonable compensation if they offer compatible
programs. - Could be triggered by provinces or by Ottawa.
- Would allow provinces to isolate themselves from
unwanted intrusions, as well as let them pass
powers up to Ottawa (as in pharmacare proposal). - Could set limits on inclusion say, at least 7
provinces with at least 50 population (adjust
for territories) plus Ottawa - Ottawa and participating provinces would
legislate the identical template. Would serve to
make it more binding. - Quebec could stay out of any initiative, but
would not have distinct status in so doing as it
has under s.94 - Should have an accessible dispute resolution
procedure (as in FTA)
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33Options National Interest/Provincial
Jurisdiction
- Regardless of what the Constitution may say,
Ottawa will be legislating in areas like cities,
early childhood development, human capital since
they are key to economic competitiveness and
social cohesion in the new global order. They
will also be key to electoral success. - Citizens will likely want provinces to be
partners in this - This is not a narrow division-of-powers/FSP issue
as much as it is a intergovernmental-process/netwo
rked federalism/fed-prov co-determination issue. - The real challenge here in terms of federal
spending may be to ensure that the bilateral
federalism or contractual federalism the
characterized the Martin administration is
addressed by a set of protocols that would
constrain Ottawas ability to arbitrarily
discriminate across provinces. - One might adopt as a principle a reworked version
of the 6th clause of the Calgary Declaration
e.g., Ottawa may sign a deal with any province
relating to areas in (not necessarily exclusive)
provincial jurisdiction, bur this deal must then
be made available to all provinces. This may
serve two purposes. First, to minimize
federal-induced asymmetry at the provincial level
and, second, to allow Ottawa to take the lead in
introducing new programs that the provinces may
want to be part of. -
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34OPTIONS Help!
- This list of options is admittedly unsatisfactory
- I would welcome suggestion here, and indeed
comments on the entire presentation (e-mail is on
first slide) - Thank you
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