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Now is the perfect opportunity for Trudeau to crack down on gouging by Canada’s phone companies

The recent Rogers outage gives the government free rein to crack down here, and they should use every inch of it, writes columnist Max Fawcett. Photo by Daria Nepriakhina/Unsplash

“You’ll forgive me if I don’t think about monetary policy.” Those words, spoken by Prime Minister Justin Trudeau in the midst of the election campaign last August, have been thrown back in his face on an almost daily basis ever since.

For conservative politicians and pundits, they were proof of his fundamental unseriousness on economic matters and his indifference to the plight of working families. But after hearing some of the thoughts from other federal party leaders on the subject, they might want to cut the prime minister a bit of slack.

These days, of course, almost everyone is thinking about monetary policy, as inflation continues to run hot and central banks hike rates in an effort to cool it off. On Wednesday, the Bank of Canada increased its key rate by a full percentage point (central banks usually move in 25 basis point increments, which are equivalent to 0.25 per cent), the biggest hike since the early 1990s. Now, the question on the minds of millions of Canadians who have mortgages and lines of credit is how high that key rate will go — and how much economic damage it will do in the process.

The prime minister’s comments from last August might have been inelegant and tone deaf, but they weren’t wrong. Politicians shouldn’t spend their time thinking about monetary policy or the Bank of Canada, which is — and must remain — independent of political influence.

Donald Trump’s repeated efforts to harass and cajole his own head central banker, U.S. Federal Reserve chairman Jerome Powell, into doing things that would juice the stock market and benefit him politically are the most visible example of why that independence is so important. Conservative Party of Canada leadership front-runner Pierre Poilievre, who continues to attack the Bank of Canada and its governor Tiff Macklem, clearly missed this lesson.

The recent Rogers outage gives the government free rein to crack down here, and they should use every inch of it. Canada’s cellphone bills remain unacceptably high, and while the major telecom companies have grudgingly created the low-cost plans the

Candice Bergen, the interim leader of the party, seems to have missed her share of lessons here as well. “Justin Trudeau continues to show he doesn’t understand monetary policy, he refuses to use the fiscal tools at his disposal, like controlling spending to combat inflation,” she tweeted. But most of that spending occurred in the past when Canada (like other countries around the world) was writing cheques to help businesses and households survive the impact of a global pandemic.

In fact, the federal government’s spending is already on a clear downward trajectory, one that can hardly be blamed for fuelling inflation. In a recent paper, Desjardins senior director of Canadian economics Randall Bartlett noted the only areas that aren’t declining are transfers to low-income households or negotiated transfers to provinces. “As tough as the adjustment is going to be,” Bartlett wrote, “interest rates need to rise to restore balance to asset markets and bring down inflation. And the burden of responsibility for returning inflation to target falls squarely on the Bank of Canada.”

Not to be outdone, NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh shared his own take on economic populism in a series of tweets that suggested “the rich & powerful will continue to rake in record profits” and that the solution to the Bank of Canada’s rate hike would be to give $1,000 in “immediate inflation relief” to Canadians. This is only a solution if you don’t actually understand how inflation works, or why it can be so difficult to dislodge from an economy once it’s taken root.

For what it’s worth, corporate profit forecasts are already getting revised down, with many market watchers suggesting those downgrades will kick off the next leg down in the current bear market. But it’s the idea that we should be sending people four-figure cheques at a time when the economy is already overheating that’s truly ridiculous. This is the economic equivalent of showing up at a burning building and telling the fire department to use gasoline instead of water to put it out.

Here’s the unpleasant truth about inflation: there’s very little that any national government, much less the Canadian one, can do to arrest it. Right now, it’s a stew whose main ingredients are post-pandemic spending, global supply chain disruptions, and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and the impact that has had on energy and grain markets, and it will take some time to come off the boil. From a policy perspective, the best thing for the federal government to do is probably nothing at all.

From a political perspective, though, being seen to do nothing in the face of a rapidly metastasizing affordability crisis is a very bad look. Cutting spending even further, as the Conservatives keep suggesting, is a pretty obvious non-starter when you actually look at the data, and sending out $1,000 cheques is just as self-evidently stupid. Still, the federal government is not without tools at its disposal, and it should pick up the biggest ones it can find. One obvious place to start is whacking our telecom oligopoly over the head until they meaningfully reduce prices.

The recent Rogers outage gives the government free rein to crack down here, and they should use every inch of it. Canada’s cellphone bills remain unacceptably high, and while the major telecom companies have grudgingly created the low-cost plans the CRTC demanded, they’re woefully inadequate for most users in 2022.

When it comes to how people actually use their mobile phones in our ever-more data-rich environment, our telecom companies are still soaking us. According to a 2021 report from Finnish telecom consultancy Rewheel, Canada still has the highest rates in the world — almost twice as high as those in the United States, and more than 10 times higher than France. And while our telecom companies try to justify these prices on the basis of our vast landmass and relatively sparse population, it turns out that those arguments don’t hold much water.

Now is the perfect opportunity for our government to crack down on the long-standing inflation in our mobile phone bills. No, it won’t reduce energy or commodity prices, the main drivers of inflation right now. And no, it won’t keep the opposition from blaming them for the Bank of Canada’s efforts to tame it. But in a moment where Canadian households are under growing financial pressure, every little bit helps.

If the Trudeau Liberals are looking for an easy political win right now, they couldn’t do much better than hitting our telecom giants where they’ve been hurting us.

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