2020 Vision
2020 Vision
2020 Vision
January 2016
Our dollar is less than US $0.70
Mo Money!
Today thousands of Canadians are jobless, and even homeless because of lack of money. Teachers
are unemployed while class sizes balloon and special needs classes are cut due to lack of funding.
Nurses, medical professionals, computer programmers, many of our brightest and best, migrate
South. Meanwhile patients pile up in the hospital hallways. Tech companies are starving for
programmers or being bought up by international conglomerates.
Businesses go bankrupt, families are rent asunder, seniors are mugged for their meager pension
cheques. Parents turn away from produce aisles where heads of cauliflower and broccoli are priced
beyond their food budgets opting for cheaper but nutritionally bankrupt choices. How many of us
can afford a $45 roast of beef, or a $17 chicken?
It certainly SEEMS like there is a lack of money, but in a global market, Canada cant just mint
more loonies and hand them out because that would simply devalue our dollar even more than it is.
If you and I don't have any money, we can't spend it. So how can we get the money moving if it isn't
in our pockets to begin with? And how can we put more money in your pocket without causing
more inflation?
If you know your history, you'll recall that in Italy, post 2nd World War, inflation was so bad that
people were burning money because it took a wheelbarrow full of money to buy a half a
wheelbarrow full of firewood!
I know some of you think the solution is to call for a collapse of our monetary system and to start
over again, but that would likely result in a level of chaos we would not choose to suffer. Is there a
way that we can save ourselves and our country without throwing the baby out with the bathwater?
Recently in Greece... the Greek citizens had to suffer frozen bank accounts, and watched as their
money was taken away to pay for the actions of a bankrupt Government. That's not what we want
for Canada.
In 2008, the Wall Street tumble almost destroyed the US and threatened to take down the entire
world economic system. The bailout package that averted that tragedy is still ongoing. Billions of
dollars had to be poured into the system to prop it up.
Now, think about this. If the US Government had used that money to pay the mortgages of the
families who were losing their houses, instead of bailing out Wall Street, the banks would have still
got the money. The only real difference would have been that those families wouldn't have lost
their homes. And they'd be buying new cars with their no-longer-required mortgage payments.
Having disposable income is crucial to a healthy economy.
So a successful 2020 Vision has to be one that increases spending rather than the current belttightening Scrooge economy that we are used to.
industrial revolution was turning the world on its ear. Suddenly, energy was everywhere! The
petroleum industry and the internal combustion engine had liberated us from the lumbering steam
era, and electrical wires were spreading across the continent like a spiders web carrying the hum
of production with it. Warehouses were filling up with tables and chairs, beds, shoes, radios,
stoves, fridges, pots, pans, mowers, chewing gum and breakfast cereal.
Production was outstripping demand because North Americans had not yet fully embraced the
consumerism mind set. They were still preoccupied with doing without, making do, and saving their
money. The result was disastrous. With the warehouses full, factories began laying off their
workers. There was no such thing as unemployment insurance, and with their wages cut off, saving
money for a rainy day seemed even more important and the belt tightening got more severe. Less
product sold. More layoffs. People began to fear that their money might not be safe in the banks,
and they were right! The banks had loaned that money out to industry and the now infamous runon-the-banks scenario ensued.
YES!
$80,000
$24,000
$56,000
$14,400
$280,000
$14,000
Amount
$6,666
$1,200
$ 466
$1,450
$1,800
$1,200
Balance
$6,666
$5,466
$5,000
$3,550
$1,750
$ 550 (disposable income)
At $550, the margin of money left over is slight, but John keeps his head above water, most of
the time.
Each month, John contributes $1,200 in Income Tax as his share in the cost of running the country.
But at this rate, the Government is slipping further into debt, and the interest on this debt eats up
most of his tax dollar. Still, if the Government were to ask him for an extra couple of hundred
bucks a month to help retire this debt, hed be reticent to agree since money is already tight for
him.
In our last election, we gave Mr. Trudeau and his Liberal Government a clear majority, and one of
the main planks of his platform was increasing the National Debt for much needed Infrastructure
spending. Compounded by our falling dollar and failing economy John Q. Canuck's future looks
pretty bleak.
$80,000
$24,000
$56,000
$280,000
$21,000
In the first example (previous page), John was only paying $14,000 in mortgage interest, but he
was also paying $14,400 in Income Tax, a total of $24,400.
Under the New Deal, because the Government is already receiving $21,000 in interest on his
mortgage, John isn't required to pay ANY income tax. His contribution to running the country has
already been satisfied. Therefore, Johns monthly budget looks like this:
Item
Gross Wages
Income Tax
Deductions(EI, CPP, etc.)
Mortgage
Bank loan, credit card payment
Food, clothing, utilities
Amount
$6,666
$
0
$ 466
$ 2,050
$ 1,800
$ 1,200
Balance
$6,666
$6,666
$6,200
$4,150
$2,350
$1,150 (disposable income)
That's a $600 a month increase in John's disposable income! The Government is collecting $21,000
from John, of which they pay $2800 (1 of the 7.5%) to the bank for administration. The net result is
a contribution from John of $19,200.
The Vision 2020 Solution, gives John more money, and gives the Government an extra $5,200 per
year.
There are an estimated 15 million households in Canada. That means the potential increase in
annual revenue could be as much as a whopping
$78 Billion!
the payment goes right back where it came from: poof, disappearing into thin air again. Only the
interest is retained by the lender.
That practice is how inflation is controlled. If you don't already know that, research it yourself. It's
a fact. So the Government does NOT have to borrow money in order to lend it to you. No increase
in debt, and no inflation.
2. The banks will never give up their monopoly on Primary Residence Lending!
Really? Then let our politicians tell us that to our faces. Let them tell us that our Government is
powerless to pass legislation governing the operation of private lending institutions in this country.
Let them admit the truth about who REALLY runs Canada!
What are your doubts?
What are your objections?
What are your questions?
What are your hopes?
Tell me! Tell each other! Tell our Government!
The important point is to get a discussion going! When the buzz gets loud enough, maybe Mr.
Trudeau will hear.