Skip to content

The Monitor Progressive news, views and ideas

Privatization and promises

April 7, 2014

0-minute read

When it comes to privatization, it seems the Saskatchewan government has a tough time recalling past promises. Heading into the 2007 election, then-Saskatchewan Party leader Brad Wall stated unequivocally that "Crowns are not going to be privatized and (subsidiaries) are not going to be wound down." Of course, we all know that once in power, Mr. Wall's government sold off the Saskatchewan Communications Network (SCN), privatized the Information Services Corporation (ISC), sold off a slew of crown subsidiaries  through the government's Saskatchewan First Policy and has sought to privatize any publicly-delivered service not deemed a "core function" of government. So perhaps it should not be too surprising that Friday's announcement by the government that it will privatize four rural liquor stores completely contradicts Mr. Wall's promise in October of 2012 "not to privatize existing government-owned liquor stores." This government has been remarkably adept at denying its privatization agenda, so I eagerly await the intellectual contortions necessary to justify how this latest broken promise is actually not further evidence of the government's privatization agenda.

This appeared as a Letter to the Editor in the April 8th Saskatoon Star-Phoenix

Simon Enoch

Topics addressed in this article

Related Articles

Canada’s fight against inflation: Bank of Canada could induce a recession

History tells us that the Bank of Canada has a 0% success rate in fighting inflation by quickly raising interest rates. If a pilot told me that they’d only ever attempted a particular landing three times in the past 60 years with a 0% success rate, that’s not a plane I’d want to be on. Unfortunately, that looks likes the plane all Canadians are on now.

Non-viable businesses need an"off-ramp"

Throughout the pandemic, many small- and medium-sized businesses have weathered the storm, thanks to federal government help. In his deputation to Canada's federal Industry Committee, David Macdonald says it's time to give those businesses an "off-ramp".

Truth bomb: Corporate sector winning the economic recovery lottery; workers falling behind

This isn’t a workers’ wage-led recovery; in fact, inflation is eating into workers’ wages, diminishing their ability to recover from the pandemic recession. Corporate profits are capturing more economic growth than in any previous recession recovery period over the past 50 years.