X Close

March 13th, 2006 - Frontier wins 2006 Templeton Freedom Award for think tank excellence . . .

July 19, 2001

In Brief:

Federal government plans to revise the Indian Act may help clean up elections on Reserves, but they won't crack the poverty problem. Aboriginals need the protection of hard property rights with security of possession.



Archaic Indian Act is behind native poverty

National Post

In yesterday's National Post, Matthew Coon Come, the national chief of the Assembly of First Nations, suggested Ottawa is orchestrating a conspiracy to trap native people in poverty in order to assimilate them. While Mr. Coon Come is right about the existence of a poverty trap, it is the legal structure of the Indian Act itself, not a desire to assimilate native Indians, that is to blame.

The federal government, in fact, should be lauded for its attempt to show some leadership in this difficult area. Canada's most archaic legislation, the Indian Act, may finally be revised this year: "New Law to Reform Native Voting," read the headline after Robert Nault, Minister of Indian Affairs, announced his proposals in January. Many of them are long overdue; on many reserves voting is a joke, with the outcome tilted toward incumbents who wield enormous financial power over band members. A legal structure that ensures fair elections and protects the jobs of reserve employees who dare to dissent from entrenched chiefs will help remedy that.

Unfortunately, however, the changes offer window dressing on a dilapidated house with a rotten foundation. How fairly leaders are elected is decidedly less important than how much scope they have when they take office. Band councils have the legal authority to evict families from their homes with 24-hour notice. The title to most reserve lands, at the behest of the Crown, belongs to the entire community. With no security of possession, it becomes an irrational act for individuals to build or improve their assets. And the wholesale exemption of reserve lands from the strictures of commercial law guarantee First Nations' exclusion from the dynamic economy surrounding them.

In a ground-breaking book published last year, Peruvian economist Hernando de Soto explained the connection between secure property rights and prosperity. Called The Mystery of Capital: Why Capitalism Triumphs in the West and Fails Everywhere Else, it links higher Third World poverty levels with the lack of clear legal definitions of property. De Soto estimates that the teeming masses in Latin America, Africa and Asia are sitting on assets that total US$9.3-trillion, a capital base that could generate more enterprises than all the money coming from developed countries. Mostly composed of the land occupied by poor people, it has become what is called "dead capital." It is "held but not owned" by its occupants. It amounts to 20 times the size of foreign commercial investment over the past decade and 93 times the amount of foreign aid to the Third World in the past 30 years. It remains captive because most of its occupants are squatters, with no legal title.

To quote The Economist, "secure title makes assets fungible. In a country with good property laws, almost anyone can use a house or a piece of land as collateral to raise a loan." It also allows for collective effort; ownership of enterprises can be shared by hundreds, each of whom can cash out his or her share without jeopardizing the business. Without a decentralized system of ownership, with legal protection of transactions, economies remain trapped in inefficient, localized webs of interaction.

This analysis offers a compelling explanation for the entrenched poverty of Canada's native people. A growing number of their opinion leaders, despite Mr. Coon Come's comments, are coming to the same conclusion. The sections of the Indian Act -- 29, 87, 89 and 90 -- that effectively forbid commercial credit create "a real reluctance to put a business on a reserve," one native leader recently stated. Repeal of those sections of the Act would do more to empower ordinary band members than a regime of fair voting.

B.C. native activist Meaghan Walker-Williams, assisted by economist David Friedman, has developed a proposal for expanding native commerce. She calls it the Coast Salish Free Trade Model, and it contains the ingredients for the revival of aboriginal economies. It would create free trade zones on all reserve properties, akin to the open economic structure that made Hong Kong an economic powerhouse, with no taxes and no external regulation. In exchange, businesses that invest in the zones would have to provide equity and employment for band members. Ms. Walker-Williams would also require investors to plow a percentage of their profits into a perpetual trust fund that would underwrite the myriad government services paid for by taxes.

Free trade zones would certainly mitigate the economic disaster induced by decades of bad law. But the notion would be impossible under the Indian Act. What investors would go near a reserve if it meant risking total capital loss? The section of the Act that forbids non-natives from seizing assets on reserves must be repealed, or the idea is a non-starter.

Legal assimilation is not cultural assimilation.

Bookmark and Share


Related Items:

  • The Search for Aboriginal Property Rights, the Frontier’s ground-breaking policy study
  • Let Aboriginals Join the Real Economy
  • A Powerful Idea for Empowering Aboriginals
  • Deconstructing the Aboriginal Problem
  • Lack Of Property Rights Part Of Native Poverty Puzzle
  • A Conversation with Tom Flanagan

    Author's Picture Peter Holle is the founding President of the Frontier Centre for Public Policy, an award-winning western Canadian based public policy think tank. Since its founding in 1997, Frontier has brought a distinctive and influential Prairie voice to regional and national debates over public policy in areas such as core public sector reform, housing, poverty, aboriginals, consumer-focused health care performance, equalization, rural policy and much more. Of the nearly 100 recognized think tanks in Canada, Frontier is one of only 5 to make the 2008 global "Go-To Think Tanks" list published by the Think Tanks and Civil Societies Program of the Foreign Policy Research Institute in Philadelphia. Mr. Holle has worked extensively with public sector reform and has provided advisory services to various governments across Canada and the United States. His publications have appeared in various newspapers and journals including dozens of newspapers, the National Post and the Wall Street Journal. He has a Masters of Business Administration from the University of Wisconsin at Madison.  He is a member of various organizations including the Mont Pelerin Society, an international organization of classical liberals.


  • Help Support New Thinking

    Localize website by geography




     

     

    Democratization of the Capital Markets with S. Mark Francis, Business Consultant/ Stock Exchange Advisor - March 24, 2010


    Upcoming Events

    How Hot Will It Get?
    with Dennis T. Avery, Senior Fellow at the Hudson Institute and Co-Author
    March 18, 2010 — Calgary

    Democratization of the Capital Markets
    with S. Mark Francis, Business Consultant/ Stock Exchange Advisor
    March 24, 2010 — Winnipeg

    Free Agent Nations: The Rise of Independent Contractors over Employees
    with Ken Phillips, Co-Founder and Executive Director,Independent Contractors of Australia and Author of Independence and the Death of Employment (Connor Court)
    March 30, 2010 — Saskatoon

    Beyond the Indian Act: Restoring Aboriginal Property Rights
    with Dr. Tom Flanagan, Professor of Political Science, University of Calgary and, André Le Dressay, Director of Fiscal Realities
    April 5, 2010 — Regina
    April 6, 2010 — Winnipeg

    Beyond the Indian Act: Restoring Aboriginal Property Rights
    with C.T. (Manny) Jules, Chief Commissioner, First Nations Tax Commission &, Dr. Tom Flanagan, Professor of Political Science, University of Calgary
    April 6, 2010 — Winnipeg



    Upcoming FCPP Appearances

    Transparency and Accountability in the Public Sector - Panel #3
    Speaker: Joseph Quesnel, Policy Analyst
    Date: March 20, 2010
    Time: 4:35 pm (approx.)
    Place: John Dutton Theatre - Calgary Public Library

    Hosted by the Macdonald-Cartier Society. For more details contact Immanuel Giulea at 514.577.2669 or immanuel@macdonaldcartier.com

    Organizational Structure & Design HPG
    Speaker: Peter Holle, President
    Date: March 25, 2010
    Time: 7 - 9:00 p.m.
    Place: University of Manitoba, Room E2-160 Engineering Building

    A discussion on creating high performance policy by maximizing transparency, neutrality and separation; distinguishing between private and public goods; and locating services at the most appropriate level of government. University grad school lecture, not open to public.

    Manitoba Policy Blueprint for the Future
    Speaker: Peter Holle, President
    Date: March 30, 2010
    Time: 8:45 a.m.
    Place: Winnipeg Realtors, 1240 Portage Avenue, Winnipeg

    Booming Saskatchewan is on the verge of matching Alberta's flat income tax. Beleaguered Ontario is pushing to trim transfer payments. Alberta is under pressure to slash public spending and reform healthcare. Sales tax harmonization is happening in most provinces. How can Manitoba avoid being left in the dust in these turbulent times? Frontier's Peter Holle maps out how western Canada's only "have not" province can pull itself out of the slow lane. For more details contact: Shaila Wise at 786-8854 or swise@winnipegrealtors.ca



    Fri March 12, 2010

    Link to Prairie Weather


    SymbolCurrent Price
    Canadian $0.9826
    US $1.0177
    S&P/TSX11970.24
    Dow Jones10607.61
    NASDAQ2365.79
    Crude Oil80.16
    Uranium65.00
    Potash125.70