|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : North
America : Canada
Quebec: Liberal budget initiates new anti-working class offensive
By Guy Charron
28 June 2003
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email the
author
In the name of reinventing the state, Quebecs
two month-old Liberal government has launched a new drive to slash
public and social services, gut labor and environmental standards
and dramatically cut the taxes of the rich and super-rich.
Finance Minister Yves Séguin sought to emphasize the
radical character of the changes the Liberals intend to make by
declaring in his June 12 budget speech, Rather than ask
what the state can do for us, we should ask what we can do without
it.
In this vein, Treasury Board President Monique Jérôme-Forget
has been mandated to review all government programs to determine
those that are to be curtailed and those that will be privatized
or outright eliminated. Only if the sponsors of these projects
are capable of demonstrating that they would be better done as
public projects will they continue to be financed by the
provincial government, said Jérôme-Forget in an address
to the Institute for Public-Private partnerships.
The Liberals won office by appealing to popular anger over
the deplorable state of public health care and education, while
claiming that they could finance a five-year, $15 billion tax
cut by freezing spending in all other areas.
Predictably, the Liberals have reneged on their promises to
improve public services. The June 12 budget increased health spending
no more than the outgoing Parti Québécois (PQ) government
had in the budget it tabled just before the election call; the
education sector will receive $200 million less than needed just
to maintain spending in real terms at last years levels.
Moreover, the Liberals have painted a somber picture of the
governments finances so as to justify the far steeper cuts
that their program review is now preparing.
No sooner were the Liberals given access to Finance Ministry
data following their April election win, than Liberal leader and
Premier-elect Jean Charest began claiming that the PQ had lied
about the state of the provinces finances. Ultimately, the
Liberals produced a report claiming that rather than a balanced
budget, Quebec was facing a $4 billion budget deficit.
It does appear the outgoing Parti Québécois government
inflated revenue projections. (The PQ, which presided over the
biggest public spending cuts in Quebec history between 1996 and
1998, made the claim of good fiscal management a centerpiece of
its reelection campaign.) That said, there is no question the
Liberals, like numerous other recent incoming governments, are
using the claim of a fiscal crisis to jettison popular promises
they never had any intention of keeping.
About two things Charest has been adamant: the Liberals will
not allow the province to incur a deficit and they will meet their
pledge to slash personal income taxes by an additional $1 billion
per year for each of the next five years.
The personal tax cuts were always slated to begin only next
year, but the Liberals sought to underline their commitment to
tax cutting by announcing in their June 12 budget the elimination
of capital taxes for 70 percent of all business.
While the Liberals are determined to make personal income tax
cuts that grossly favor the upper middle class and the rich, their
tax-cutting rhetoric does not preclude their resorting to various
forms of regressive taxation, such as increased user fees. The
June 12 budget announced that Hydro-Québe,c the public
company with a quasi-monopoly on the production, distribution
and sale of electricity in Québe,c will increase its rates
by 33 percent, or $1.8 billion per year.
Those hardest hit by the Liberal budget are the most vulnerable.
The budget for social housing has been reduced by 60 percent,
although Montreal and Quebecs other major urban centers
face a chronic shortage of low-cost housing. Indeed, the current
housing crisis is said to be the worst since World War II.
In their budget, the Liberals reneged on promises to institute
a minimal threshold for social assistance benefits, to stop the
government deducting alimony payments from the social assistance
given single mothers, and to stop forcing those on social assistance
and the elderly from paying for their medication. In the latter
case, the premiums for the obligatory public insurance system
have instead been increased by 9 percentan increase that
mainly affects the most exploited sections of the working class,
those who do not benefit from an employer-paid or co-paid insurance
scheme.
The Séguin budget also introduced a new program of wage
subsidies for companies that hire youth on social assistance.
Needless to say, the program entails no requirements to provide
any type of genuine job training.
The Liberals have sought to camouflage their drive to dismantle
what remains of the welfare state by making a lot of noise about
the $3 billion in aid that the Quebec government provides business.
The June 12 budget did curtail these expenditures, but largely
at the expense of lame duck enterprises which have
provided jobs in areas of high unemployment. Quebec-based, Canadian
and foreign multi-nationals in the aeronautics, biotechnology
and information technology sector continue to benefit from a whole
series of lucrative aid programs.
The cuts made in the June 12 budget are only a small down payment.
Declared Jérôme-Forget, The effort we made
this year is only a beginning. It is just the first milestone
in a huge clean-up of the public finances.
The 400,000 public sector workers whose contracts expire this
month will be the first to find themselves in the governments
line of fire. Already, the Liberals have indefinitely postponed
salary adjustments that were to correct longstanding discrimination
against womenadjustments sought by the public sector unions
for 15 years and only conceded by virtue of a law adopted by the
National Assembly last year. The Charest government is demanding
a collective agreement that guarantees greater flexibilitythe
flexibility to slash jobs and close operations, subcontract work
and proceed with privatization.
Already the government has announced that the approximately
24,000 civil servants who will retire in the next few years will
not be replaced, although they represent almost a third of the
provincial civil service workforce.
The Charest government has also said it wants to revise Article
45 of the Labour Code, which prohibits the subcontracting of union
jobs unless the subcontractor offers comparable wages and working
conditions.
The Parti Québécois (PQ) will try to use the
immense popular opposition that the Liberal measures will provoke
to revive the Québec indépendantiste movement.
In this enterprise, it will benefit from the unfailing support
of the union bureaucracy. Such support will not in any way bar
the leaders of the Quebec Federation of Labour, Confederation
of National Trade Unions and other unions from collaborating with
the Liberal government in the name of the superior interests
of Québec. Prior to the election, the unions touted
the Liberals as a lesser evil to the ultra-right-wing
Action démocratique du Québec (ADQ) and then celebrated
May Day by meeting with Premier Charest.
The PQ will try to make working people forget that for the
last nine years it formed the most right-wing Québec government
since the beginning of the 1960s, savagely cutting the health-care
and education systems and social assistance in order to attain
a zero-deficit. Then in the election campaign, the
PQ competed with the Liberals and ADQ for the favor of big business,
with its own proposals for tax cuts and trimming the fat
off the state.
See Also:
Mass social disaffection reflected
in electoral rout of Quebec separatists
[18 April 2003]
War overshadows Quebec election
[11 April 2003]
Quebec elites
new consensus: public and social services must be gutted
[27 September 2002]
Crisis of Parti Québécois
regime heralds coming political upheavals
[15 August 2002]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |