B.C.鈥檚 poverty reduction plan has been delayed, leaving us the only province bereft of a government-created anti-poverty strategy for a few months more. This sombre news was delivered by Shane Simpson, social development minister for the NDP minority government, as consultation continued around the province.
The plan now is to release a 鈥渨hat we heard鈥 report in June, and then bring in legislation in the fall. 鈥淭he poverty reduction strategy will come after that,鈥 says the government website.
The ministry has received dozens of submissions from 鈥渟takeholder鈥 groups around the province, and community meetings continue. There is a weary familiarity to these submissions, such as the three (so far) from the B.C. Poverty Reduction Coalition.
Who鈥檚 that, you may ask. The backbone is of course public sector unions and union umbrella groups, including otherwise unknown outfits like 鈥淪treams of Justice鈥 and 鈥淧rotein for People.鈥
鈥淔irst Call,鈥 a core member whose name refers to your taxes, has a page devoted to the struggle against B.C. child labour, illustrated with a ridiculous of a sad boy of about eight pretending to operate an excavator.
Its key recommendations include increasing the minimum wage to $15 an hour, raising welfare rates and legislating targets to reduce B.C.鈥檚 poverty rate by 30 per cent within four years, and 70 per cent within 10 years.
This longer-term goal is to be accomplished by bringing in a universal $10-a-day child care program among other strategies. Sound familiar? The B.C. NDP campaigned tirelessly on these ideas over the past decade, and some submissions read like NDP campaign brochures from 2017 and years previous.
Indeed, the minimum wage policy is already in place. Welfare rates were raised as soon as the NDP minority took office, a long overdue step in that circumstance. We are assured the universal child care plan is underway, although Premier John Horgan has said the $10-a-day part was a slogan borrowed from those advocacy groups and not necessarily the rate.
The B.C. Green Party wants to go to a guaranteed minimum income system, instead of just imposing increases to the minimum wage that have been shown over and over to push low-wage employees out of work. (An obvious example is the self-serve kiosks being introduced in fast-food restaurants.)
The fatal flaw in these plans is that everyone be given a guaranteed 鈥渓iving wage鈥 and then if they earn money, the dole is clawed back after a certain point. Ultra-progressive Finland recently announced it is abandoning its universal basic income experiment next year.
Why? It鈥檚 too expensive. Handing out guaranteed cash to everyone can only be financed by a huge tax increase, which increases tax avoidance the way cranking up minimum wages increases hiring avoidance.
Defining poverty isn鈥檛 easy. First Call scrapped its whole methodology a few years ago, after it was pointed out it used federal statistics that measure relative income inequality, something that would still exist if the minimum wage was raised to $50 an hour.
Last year there was a fuss about Richmond being identified as the Lower Mainland鈥檚 worst community for poverty, defined as after-tax income compared to average household needs. Critics suggested that the issue in booming Richmond may be under-reported income, given that it鈥檚 B.C.鈥檚 major centre for Asian satellite families.
There is another anti-poverty plan in place. It鈥檚 called market capitalism, and it鈥檚 worked everywhere it has been tried, perhaps most noticeably in China. Globally, in the last two decades alone, has been reduced by nearly half.
Tom Fletcher is B.C. legislature reporter and columnist for Black Press. Email: tfletcher@blackpress.ca
tfletcher@blackpress.ca
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