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Policy to sink your teeth into . . .
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(EM474)
May 29, 2009

In Brief:

  • The Manitoba provincial government’s announcement that it will waive park entry fees for two years is a classic case of good politics but bad policy.
  • Good policy analysis requires evaluating the secondary effects of a policy, not just the advertised effects its political proponents would like the focus to be on.
  • Removing park entry fees simply shifts the costs toward taxpayers, many of whom either can’t or won’t use the parks, and some of whom are paying their taxes from money made providing services that compete with the parks.
  • The short-sightedness of this policy should raise a broader question regarding the government’s ability to set priorities and apply sound public policy principles.


The Problem With Free Parks

The onset of a global recession has been met by a flourishing of creative politics and policy from the bizarre (a wax museum earmarked to be built in California as part of the Obama stimulus package) to the verbose (Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd’s 7,000 word essay on economics), to the whimsical.

Manitoba’s recent initiative of removing user fees from provincial parks would be an example of the latter, but it is also a case study in bad public policy and a broader malaise in Manitoba politics.

Free provincial parks sound like one of the hardest policies in the world to be against. Who could oppose families –children in particular- connecting with nature, without having to travel too far, or dealing with money which many see as the root of all evil? But the case for user fees wherever possible is strong and straightforward enough that many people could and should oppose the free provincial park policy.

For one thing, the parks are only being made free in the narrowest sense of the word. It may well be that no money changes hands at the park gate, but provincial park maintenance cost a touch under $19 million last year and those costs do not disappear. Indeed, there is a famous dictum in the policy world - there “is no such thing as a free lunch.” Governments cannot avoid costs, they can only shift them. While politicians usually prefer to advertise the primary effects of a public policy, like free entry, the secondary effects, higher taxes elsewhere, cannot be ignored.

Consider the most obvious secondary effect of cost shifting onto the general taxpayer; the estimated $2.6 million that won’t be collected at the park gate means $2.6 million of either increased taxes or reductions in other services for all Manitobans. This effect applies to those who use the parks, which might be seen as fair, but also to those who either can’t or don’t.

One of those groups is all the business owners and their employees who provide a service in competition with the parks, from urban entertainment to private camping grounds. Running a business in these economic times already involves enough uncertainty without a major competitor suddenly announcing that they are dropping their price to zero for the next two years and funding their activities through the taxes of all Manitobans. Adding insult to injury, those other providers are now being forced to fund their competition with a proportion of what their own businesses make.

Another such group, which the new policy is supposed to help, is low income earners. Even here the picture is more complex than it seems because park users are not necessarily low income earners. In order to pay your seven dollars at the gate, you must be able to afford to get there first. Getting to provincial parks may seem a frivolous barrier to middle income earners, but removing park fees is same in concept as giving all Manitobans taxpayer funded ice cream in Hawaii. Great if you can get there, but you pay for it even if you can’t.

More importantly Manitoba, and Canada for that matter, already have comprehensive tax and transfer systems aimed at topping up low incomes. Like the wasteful policy of keeping electricity prices ludicrously low and benefiting mainly well-to-do folks who can afford to pay higher rates, eliminating user fees for park visitors benefits mostly those who don’t need help in the first place.

These are much more effective ways to help low income people than distorting the outdoor recreation market.

Just like other weird political responses to the global economic situation, the free provincial park policy is a political attempt to be photographed with the primary effects of a policy even though the secondary effects will cancel them out, or worse. More deeply, it is worth Manitobans’ while to ask: Is shifting the cost of Provincial parks from park users to taxpayers really the best that can be expected of the provincial government, or has it just run out of better ideas?

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    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. 

    Click for a high-res photo



    Feedback:

    • RE: The Problem with Free Parks — May 29, 2009
      Good, thoughtful piece. I hadn't given the issue any thought, but you effectively point out the wrongheadedness of the policy. You're quite right -- poor people don't go to these parks. Your ice cream analogy was a beaut. When we used to go camping with the kids (with our $5,000 tent trailer), of course I thought nothing of paying the park fees. Why should anyone else subsidize my recreation choices? As you point out, this new policy must be quite a blow to private campground owners. Think of all the entrepreneurs who, in good faith, invested their money in a campground and then spruce it up to attract visitors, only to see the admission cost of their biggest competitor reduced to zero, with their tax dollars to boot. What a surefire way to discourage private investment in outdoor recreation outside the provincial parks. E-mail from Winnipeg


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