The National Union of Public and General Employees (NUPGE) is
concerned that the federal government is missing an opportunity to
respond to Canada's underlying economic problems by continuing its
hands-off, short-term approach in its 2013 budget.
“The impact of the drop in oil prices should be a warning to the federal
government that just exporting more raw materials is not enough. This
budget could have been the start of a long-term, active approach to
building a balanced economy,” said James Clancy, NUPGE National
President.
NUPGE argues that a first step in a long-term strategy to deal with
Canada's economic problems should be broad-based consultations with key
stakeholders from labour, business, government, educational institutions
and research institutes.
“These stakeholders could work together on a framework to improve the
long-term prospects for Canada's economy,” said Clancy. “The framework
should recognize that people and nature must be at the heart of a modern
economic strategy. And it should address questions such as which
sectors have the greatest potential and how can they be developed to
ensure good jobs are created in Canada while protecting our
environment.”
Instead, as the government's approach to skills training in this budget
shows, there has been no consultation with most stakeholders. The result
is cosmetic solutions that create conflict with the provinces and fail
to address fundamental problems.
“Improving skills training so Canadians looking for work are able to get
the skills they need to fill the jobs that are out there requires that
the federal government sit down with the provinces and other
stakeholders,” said Clancy. “Our economy is being held back because the
Prime Minister refuses to work with all major stakeholders to develop a
comprehensive national skills development strategy.
“That strategy should encompass school-to-work, as well as retraining
and skills upgrading for existing workers. Apprenticeship needs to play a
major role,” said Clancy. “The barriers and challenges for apprentices
and employers are well known and there are a number of practical steps
governments can take - if they are willing to work together - to
increase the number of apprentices and apprenticeships.”
NUPGE has worked with Canadians for a Modern Industrial Strategy (CMIS)
to produce a discussion paper on how improving apprenticeship can help
solve Canada's skills crisis. This paper expresses the issues in
concrete terms and provides possible solutions. A copy of the paper is
available at www.industrialstrategy.ca.
The continued attack on the public sector in this year's budget is
another example of the federal government's refusal to consider the long
term impact of its policies.
“Cutting public services, eliminating public sector jobs and attacking
public employees' benefits has a direct negative impact on the economy
in the short-term and deprives families, communities and businesses of
the quality public services they need to succeed in the long-term,” said
Clancy. “Reforms intended to make the public sector run more like a
business have backfired by reducing accountability and effectiveness.
The government needs to take a different approach and look at options to
raise more revenue to protect and strengthen quality public services
for all Canadians.”
The National Union of Public and General Employees (NUPGE) is one of Canada's largest labour organizations with over 340,000 members. Our mission is to improve the lives of working families and to build a stronger Canada by ensuring our common wealth is used for the common good.