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Transforming Alberta

 

Alberta has hit a rough-patch recently with a return to deficits, debt and damaged investor confidence.
 
The Frontier Centre believes Alberta can not only recover but prosper and lead Canada in sensible policy. Alberta has over-spent, under-saved and alienated the province as a destination for investment. 
 
On spending, it has moved forward conservatively preferring to fund old policy models instead of re-inventing and reforming them.
 
Here are some policy ideas for meeting these challenges:
 
 
Core Public Sector Reform
 
  • Adopt successful policy models that maximize transparency of costs, neutrality of delivery and separation of elected officials from government operations.
  • Institute a purchaser-provider split where possible to maximize competitive service delivery.
  • Replace balanced budget law with one that limits spending increases to population plus economic growth.
 
 
Healthcare
 
  • Replace the present global budgeting hospital funding model with one based on payment for results.
  • Separate the purchase and provision of services to introduce competitive pressures for more effective and better quality services.
 
 
Energy
 
  • Reform energy policy in Alberta to make the province competitive for investment for traditional or alternative energy developments.
  • Neutrality in policy between all energy supplies should be a key principle.
 
 
Environment
 
  • Focus on measurable results.
  • Recognize wealth creation as the wellspring for environmental improvement.
  • Substitute risk and cost-benefit analysis for the precautionary principle.
  • Focus on incentives via property rights.
  • Embrace environmentally friendly technology.
  • Eliminate public sector conflicts of interest by separating resource ownership from regulation.
 
 
Transform Equalization
 
  • Work with Ottawa and the other provinces to end equalization and transfer payments which punish productive, entrepreneurial provinces and reward poor policy and dampen wealth creation in have-not provinces.
  • Replace federal transfers to have-not provinces by giving them the GST (must harmonize) and transferring provincial debt back to the federal government to reduce interest payments.
 
 
Local Government
 
  • Modernize the Municipal Government Act to maximize transparency, neutrality and separation in local government operations.
  • Require transparency and competition in local government contracting.
  • Legislate managed competition model which requires the in-house work force to compete with outside suppliers.
 
 
Divest Non-Core Assets
 
  • Divest Alberta Treasury Branches, Epcor, and Enmax and have governments at all levels focus on core service delivery of healthcare, education, highways and the sensible protection of citizens.
 
 
Heritage Fund
 
  • Once the province is back to a balanced budget, deposit 30% of annual resource revenues into the Heritage Fund.
 
 
Public Sector Pensions
 
  • Require public sector pensions to switch to mandated contributions from mandated benefits; this would put public sector employees on par with the private sector and avoid future public sector pension liabilities.
 
 
Property Rights
 
  • The Canadian Constitution allows a province and the federal government to pass an amendment to the Constitution, which then becomes applicable to that province.
  • The federal Parliament and Alberta’s legislature should pass a property rights amendment to rectify the lack of such a defined right in the existing Constitution.


Upcoming Events

More events coming soon. Please join us then as we explore the frontier of public policy.



Upcoming FCPP Appearances

Visionary Conversations: Our Education System: The Good, the Bad, and the Solutions
Speaker: Rodney Clifton, Senior Fellow for Frontier Centre for Public Policy
Date: May 22, 2013
Time: 7:00 pm
Place: Robert B Schultz Theatre, St. John's College, University of Manitoba, Fort Garry Campus

Community Policy Forum
Speaker: Steve Lafleur, FCPP Policy Analyst
Date: May 28, 2013
Time: 7:00 - 9:00 pm
Place: Grant Park McNally Robinson, Winnipeg, Mb


Wed May 22, 2013

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