πΈ WTF is “Productivity & Competitiveness”? — Breaking Down the Carney Budget
Mark Carney’s 2025 federal budget just landed — a massive C$280 billion plan over five years.
Here’s how it’s supposed to be divided:
π️ C$115 billion for Infrastructure
⚙️ C$110 billion for Productivity & Competitiveness
πͺ C$30 billion for Defence & Security
π️ C$25 billion for Housing
That second line — “Productivity & Competitiveness” — is the one that raises eyebrows. π€¨
What does it actually mean?
⚙️ The Fine Print
In government-speak, it often includes:
π° Corporate subsidies (“innovation incentives,” “green tech funds,” etc.)
π Industrial handouts for battery plants or data centers
π§π» Upskilling and automation programs (sometimes code for layoffs)
π Export promotion and deregulation campaigns
In real life? It means billions going to big business, not the communities that actually create value every day.
π‘ What We Could Do Instead
What if those C$110 billion went into people-centered productivity?
✨ Universal Basic Income so no one falls through the cracks
π± Community gardens and local food networks
π️ Creative spaces and co-ops that make art, culture, and innovation accessible
π₯ Indigenous-led land and climate projects restoring ecosystems and knowledge
That would make Canada truly competitive — not in profits, but in care, resilience, and imagination. π
π€ Reflective Question:
If you had C$110 billion to make Canada more “productive,”
what would you invest in first?
#MarkCarney #Budget2025 #BasicIncome #CorporateWelfare #HousingCrisis #ZipolitaWrites #CanadaPolitics #FutureOfWork
No comments:
Post a Comment