The annual budget consultation farce started on Monday with a couple of sessions.
This year the provincial government has turned out a budget simulator that is supposed “to illustrate the tough budget choices” the provincial government is facing and “to promote a public dialogue on how we can set a sustainable fiscal course.”
The simulation can’t really do either of those things. The information is relatively recent but the options to adjust income and spending don;t cover the full range of policy choices the government can make. The ones it does offer are artificially limited to presented increases or decreases. That’s a programming choice as much as anything else, but the reason for the artificial limitations is not important. The fact is that the choices are deliberately limited.
The result is that people can’t really see what sorts of choices the provincial government might make to set a “sustainable fiscal course.” In that sense, the current “consultation” is as artificial as all the other ones the provincial government has run over the past decade or so. People aren’t stupid. They can handle the truth.
The politicians and bureaucrats can’t.