4 responses

  1. Tim
    March 11, 2009

    We are entering a great economic correction. The correction is occurring simply because there were / are economic flaws / imbalance. However admitting this requires admitting that past and present Governments who did not recognize the economic flaws and imbalance are the cause for not understanding Governments role of balancing social and individual costs.

    Countries with lower cost of living and high productivity, such as Asian countries which grew significantly since the 80’s are in a better position to recover.

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  2. Todd
    March 11, 2009

    The flaws and imbalances you mention, Tim, are part of the system itself. While governments can exacerbate them (which is partly what happened, at Capital’s demand) or muffle them, there’s no getting away from them so long as capitalism’s around.

    Re. China, there’s an interesting observation from David Harvey near the end of this piece:

    http://davidharvey.org/2009/02/why-the-us-stimulus-package-is-bound-to-fail/#more-201

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  3. Purple Library Guy
    March 11, 2009

    What we need is an economy that is less oriented towards trade. We’re too blasted vulnerable to all this. Canada has lots of resources, an educated workforce, a fair amount of manufacturing and technological expertise, and even quite a lot of capital. If anyone could be considered capable of running a relatively inwardly oriented economy, from raw materials to finished products to (sigh) marketing all within one country, it would be Canada. But that would take some serious policy making and government interference in the economy, like some tough foreign ownership rules.

    Tough foreign ownership rules would have a fundamental non-economic advantage as well–the country wouldn’t be so full of quisling traitor branch-plant CEOs telling our politicians to sell Canada off to the lowest bidders.

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  4. Paul Tulloch
    March 12, 2009

    I am all for industrial strategy based upon the nations assets. However, I to suggest we should limit trade so that we can produce it here is not something I recommend.

    However, that said, we do need to build some value adding jewels that diversify our resource extraction based economy.

    We need an industrial strategy that realizes we are a small open economy that could easily produce and innovate almost any high value adding product. (like automobiles) We need a national effort that has the support and help of the government in this transitional stage.

    I think the Ontario Liberals are least discussing such government aid and seed money. There is a huge international, national and regional role that is required by all levels of government, industry and labour to forge a pathway out of this collapse. The short run should include getting our credit markets functioning, however returning to somekind of pre 2008 status quo will not suffice. And that is what the federal strategy is based upon.

    It has got to be followed up with a longer term.

    At the federal level we have a leadership vacuum because the ideological blinders. What will it take for the feds to recoginze there is a role for them to initiate change. The American economy is in a much different space like Andrew states and well I might debate him a bit on his lower levels of US stimulus spillover into Canada, we cannot think that somehow the solutions to our economic woes our bundled up within Mr. Obama hands. We require direct investment into developing our economic assets. We have the human resource base that can manage such high quality-productivity output, as the current studies on the auto sector have indicated. The problem is we are having a serious curtailment in functioning assets for production. Investment I believe has to focus on high value adding asset with a green oriented output.

    It is the way forward.

    Having a national strategy backed by some serious stimulus dollars os such an opportunity for our future that to have Mr.Harper drop the ball like he is will be a long term calamity for the next generation of Canadians.

    Now is the time for action.

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