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Heather Scoffield: Chrystia Freeland wants to spend more — lots more

Generous, because doing less will only hurt everyone in the long run.

And yes, we can afford it.

staff billed her first big finance-minister vision speech on Wednesday as “an announcement of national significance” and that was an overreach. She quite deliberately avoided talk of numbers or of setting firm parameters on government spending or deficits.

But in her speech and in a subsequent interview with the Star, she did set out some principles that will frame her decision-making as she navigates through the pandemic, and that will eventually have a great deal of influence on our lives as well.

If there was an announcement in her virtual speech to the Toronto Global Forum, it was that logic and compassion alike dictate big, fat government spending for a long time to come.

There is a moral case to be made for governments to spend and do “whatever it takes” to stamp out the virus and mitigate the damage for businesses and individuals alike, she said. But we knew that.

The point of her speech was to make a strong economic case for spending more, lots more, rather than less — not just because she’s (unashamedly) a bleeding-heart liberal but because the economic recovery depends on it.

In the interview, she laid out three distinct stages for fiscal policy. Right now, the effort is focused on controlling the virus and bridging individuals and companies to the other side with generous but time-limited support. Step two comes when we move beyond coping to repairing, when the government will dedicate “significant” money and programs to pushing the economy back to where it was and positioning it for the future.

And only in step three, when the recession is completely over, will the federal government begin to contemplate ratcheting back the spending.

She pointed to a consensus, not just in Canada but among economic thinkers at the International Monetary Fund and around the world, that austerity is all wrong. Curtailing government support while the recession is still with us would serve to undermine companies that are struggling through no fault of their own, and penalize people who have lost their livelihood because they happen to work in public-facing jobs.

And besides, with interest rates so low and the Bank of Canada indicating on Wednesday that they will stay that way for at least a couple of years, government borrowing is a bargain right now.

“The upshot is that we are living today in a world where the risks of fiscal inaction outweigh the risks of fiscal action. Doing too little is more dangerous and potentially more costly than doing too much,” Freeland said in her speech.

At some point, when the pandemic has been vanquished and the economy has fully recovered, there will be limits to government spending and a reinstatement of fiscal rules to rein in government largesse, she said. But for now, the focus of fiscal policy has to be on controlling contagion, supporting Canadian individuals and business, and making sure permanent damage is kept to a minimum.

But does it have to be all or nothing? Freeland presents it as a binary choice. It’s either government spending freely to prevent any permanent “scarring” from the recession — keeping all businesses open, finding jobs for everyone, keeping all the rent paid. Or it’s a “monstrous” and “heartless” fiscal policy that abandons people and companies for the sake of notional fiscal rules that date back to the bygone era of the 1990s when interest rates were high and inflation was more lively.

Not even Freeland’s most bitter political opponents argue in favour of chopping government support any time soon. The political and economic debate in Canada is around the “how” — how should supports be designed to be efficient and impactful, who should take priority, and how strict the rules for eligibility should be. Those are debates worth having.

Even on the “how,” there’s a consensus among politicians and government institutions alike that low-income people and certain key industries such as airlines, accommodation and food services are repeatedly hammered by the pandemic and deserve special attention.

Far more controversial is the spending of the future — when and how the Liberals should impose some fiscal discipline, what kind of growth and recovery they should foster.

Conservatives tend to argue that borrowing on the assumption that low interest rates will stick around indefinitely is folly. Markets and economists want to see some kind of framework that will ensure good decisions and a sustainable fiscal path for the long term. Business groups urge government to impose a tight target for deficits and spending.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, however, says there’s way too much uncertainty in the economy to contemplate guidelines and restraints right now.

Freeland has talked extensively with all of them, but especially Trudeau. Her conclusion? Spending “needs to be limited and it needs to be temporary” over the long run, she says. But spending rules? Not quite yet.

That’s a choice that has little to do with logic or compassion, and everything to do with politics.

Heather Scoffield is the Star’s Ottawa bureau chief and an economics columnist. Follow her on Twitter:

‘High risk products’: Baby spinach sold at Walmart and other Ontario grocery stores recalled over Salmonella fears

Fresh Attitude brand baby spinach has been recalled from various grocery stores due to possible Salmonella contamination.

The Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA) issued the recall notice on Nov. 26, warning consumers to throw out the recalled products or return to the store purchased. The recalled products were sold in Walmart and other grocery stores across Ontario, according to the .

The recall applies to the following Fresh Attitude baby spinach products:

– 312 gram size with UPC code 8 88048 00028 8 and best before date 2020 DE 04

– 142 gram size with UPC code 8 88048 00004 2 and best before date 2020 DE 04/2020 DE 05

“This recall was triggered by the company. The CFIA is conducting a food safety investigation, which may lead to the recall of other products. If other high-risk products are recalled, the CFIA will notify the public through updated Food Recall Warnings” the agency stated. “The CFIA is verifying that industry is removing the recalled products from the marketplace.”

Here’s a picture of the recalled products:

The agency also advised consumers:

– Food contaminated with Salmonella may not look or smell spoiled but can still make you sick.

– Young children, pregnant women, the elderly and people with weakened immune systems may contract serious and sometimes deadly infections. Healthy people may experience short-term symptoms such as fever, headache, vomiting, nausea, abdominal cramps and diarrhea. Long-term complications may include severe arthritis.

– If you think you became sick from consuming a recalled product, call your doctor.

No reported illnesses have been associated with the consumption of the recalled baby spinach products.