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BC VIEWS: Clark91Ƶs 91Ƶjobs plan91Ƶ spins faster

Premier Christy Clark is adapting her jobs plan marketing to fit the jobs that are appearing
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Premier Christy Clark91Ƶs 91Ƶjobs plan91Ƶ propaganda is gearing up for another election, complete with heavy-rotation TV ads assuring B.C. hockey and football fans that 91Ƶour opportunity is here.91Ƶ

The stated purpose of these feel-good ads is to highlight overdue investments in trades and technical education, and extol the virtues of the government91Ƶs housing policies.

The jobs plan has been Clark91Ƶs marketing vehicle since she assumed the leadership of the BC Liberal Party in 2011. It was inspired by former prime minister Stephen Harper91Ƶs 91Ƶeconomic action plan,91Ƶ faded billboards for which can still be seen around B.C.

This marketing must work regardless of government ideology, because Alberta NDP Premier Rachel Notley now has an 91ƵAlberta jobs plan91Ƶ that also involves her standing in front of smiling people wearing hardhats.

Unfortunately, in most areas of B.C. as well as Alberta, what91Ƶs lacking are actual jobs. Clark constantly repeats the figure of 191,000 net new jobs in B.C. in the past five years, and glosses over the fact that all of that job growth has occurred in southwest urban areas around Vancouver and Victoria.

The rest of the province has seen a net loss of jobs. Mills and mines have shut down or reduced production, and the gas fields of the northeast hit a low ebb with a series of delays to liquefied natural gas export proposals.

There is recovery in energy and commodity markets. I91Ƶm assured by Dawson Creek Mayor Dale Bumstead among others that drill rigs are returning to the Montney shale, a rich source of petroleum liquids that can be mixed with the Alberta heavy oil that will eventually start moving south and west in greater quantities.

The forest industry is in uncertain times, with declining timber supply and U.S. trade threats, and it91Ƶs looking for a break from the B.C. government in the pre-election budget that will be revealed in February. A legacy of B.C.91Ƶs resurrected provincial sales tax is that we91Ƶre the only place left in Canada where PST is charged on electricity bills.

And for all of Clark91Ƶs rhetoric about the lowest personal income taxes, the business tax environment is not attractive.

According to the government91Ƶs own Commission on Tax Competitiveness, sales tax still lands on most machinery and equipment, for which B.C. has the third lowest investment rate in the country.

Combining corporate income tax, sales tax and non-residential property tax, B.C. comes in well above the national average, with a 91Ƶmarginal effective tax rate91Ƶ of 27.9 per cent compared to 18.9 per cent for the rest of Canada.

In the urban southwest, there is a building boom, an increase in service and technology jobs and steeply increasing cost of living driven by real estate prices. So we have areas with jobs but no place to live, and areas with cheap housing and no jobs.

The latest official version of Clark91Ƶs 91Ƶjobs plan91Ƶ was rolled out last week. The deadline for three LNG plants moves to construction underway by 2020, and mine opening and expansion goals are also kicked down the road.

The new headliner is 91Ƶinnovation,91Ƶ with UBC president Santa Ono heading an effort to stimulate growth of new technology businesses through university research.

There will also be a 91Ƶclimate action91Ƶ jobs plan, which seems even more vague. My guess is, look for lots of tree planting as well as paving this spring.

I wish I could tell you the NDP opposition has a clearer strategy for 2017, but so far that91Ƶs not the case. More on that in a subsequent column.

Tom Fletcher is B.C. legislature reporter and columnist for Black Press. Email: tfletcher@blackpress.ca Twitter: @tomfletcherbc



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