Sunday, November 15, 2020

Canada's 'generous' COVID-19 income supports vastly outpaced other developed nations: OECD report

The report shows household incomes in Canada increased by 11% in the second quarter of 2020, despite a more than 10% contraction in the economy over the same time

Author of the article:Jesse Snyder
Publishing date:Nov 14, 2020 • Last Updated 1 day ago •
The Liberal government introduced a number of emergency programs early in the COVID-19 pandemic, widely supported by businesses and the general public.
 PHOTO BY LARS HAGBERG/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES/FILE

OTTAWA — Federal spending on financial supports during the height of the global pandemic in Canada greatly outpaced that of other developed countries, enough to actually raise household incomes at a time when the economy was in free fall.

A new report by the Organization for Economic Co-Operation and Development (OECD) shows that household incomes in Canada increased by 11 per cent in the second quarter of 2020, while incomes in other developed nations including the U.K., France and Germany decreased. The boost came despite a more than 10 per cent contraction in the Canadian economy over the same period, shortly after strict lockdowns were introduced across the country.

The figures underscore the immense scale of the Liberal government’s emergency aid spending, prompting economists to contemplate what level of fiscal response is necessary to cushion the Canadian public against economic fallout.

“It raises a very serious question about whether we overdid it,” said Jack Mintz, economist at the University of Calgary’s School of Public Policy. “It’s one thing to help people bridge the pandemic because they lost income. But it’s another thing to actually make them richer.”

The report by the OECD comes weeks after another report by the International Monetary Fund (IMF) projected that Canada’s deficit as a percentage of GDP will be the single-largest of any country in 2021, at 19.9 per cent. The U.S. (18.7 per cent) and U.K. (16.5 per cent) are expected to run the next-largest shortfalls.

Experts are widely in agreement that some level of fiscal support was needed in order to keep businesses afloat and replace the lost income of unemployed people. But Mintz and others have long suggested that federal support programs could have already been trimmed back as a way to incentivize workers and not avoid overspending.

“In terms of lost income, the appropriate thing is probably to be flat,” he said. “But certainly not increasing.”
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The Liberal government introduced a number of emergency programs early in the pandemic, widely supported by businesses and the general public. The Canada Emergency Response Benefit (CERB) gave unemployed people $2,000 per month, while the Canada Emergency Wage Subsidy (CEWS) paid up to 75 per cent of wages for businesses as a way to keep people employed.

Combined, the two projects will cost over $150 billion by the end of December, according to government estimates. The federal deficit is projected to reach $350 billion in 2021, then decline sharply in the following years.

“Canada was more generous than most other countries in providing quick stimulus,” said Avery Shenfeld, chief economist at CIBC.

Economists are broadly in agreement that current spending measures will need to be wound down sooner rather than later, or risk slowing an eventual recovery. Ottawa in late summer made moves to reduce payments under the CERB from $2,000 to $1,600 per month, but ultimately abandoned those plans after facing pressure from the NDP.

It has since transitioned to the new $2,000-per-month Canada Recovery Benefit (CRB), which Shenfeld said includes some provisions that should better incentivize return to work.

“As the economy improves, ideally, we want to gradually make unemployment benefits less available and less tempting, and build in more incentive to accept to work,” he said.


It’s one thing to help people bridge the pandemic... But it’s another thing to actually make them richer


Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland has offered few details about how she will sketch out a return to pre-pandemic budgets, and has declined to provide an updated fiscal anchor in her upcoming budget update.

In her first major speech as finance minister in late October, Freeland did hint that spending would eventually be wound down.

“Our fiscally expansive approach to fighting the coronavirus cannot and will not be infinite,” she said.

The OECD report also had the United States posting a rise in household incomes in the second quarter at 10 per cent, largely due to the emergency CARES Act passed by Donald Trump in April. However, the OECD said the bump is likely to be “temporary” as new fiscal spending plans remain stuck in Congress.

Other countries posting higher incomes included Ireland (3.6 per cent), Australia (2.7 per cent) and Finland (1.1 per cent). Italy saw a seven per cent drop, while household incomes in the U.K. dropped 3.5 per cent.
Pandemic aggravates opioid crisis as overdoses rise and services fall out of reach

OTTAWA — The COVID-19 crisis has overshadowed an equally dark pandemic of opioid overdoses, which have risen sharply since March as the border closure and limited access to services raise fatal risks for drug users.
© Provided by The Canadian Press

Jurisdictions across the country have reported an increase in overdose deaths tied to opioids, a stark reversal of the 13 per cent decline in fatal opioid overdoses between 2018 and 2019.

British Columbia saw more than 100 "illicit toxicity deaths" each month between March and August, with the death toll breaching 175 in May, June and July, according to numbers compiled by the Public Health Agency of Canada last month.

The 181 deaths in June were a 138 per cent increase from the 76 fatalities in the same period a year earlier.

The situation is no better in Ontario, where an estimated 50 to 80 people per week are dying of overdoses, according to the chief coroner's office.

The figures are up by 35 to 40 per cent year over year since the onset of the pandemic.

"Canadians should be seized with this particular crisis," said chief public health officer Dr. Theresa Tam last month, given it is "escalating as we speak."

The deadly spike is attributable to a range of factors linked to the virus, experts say.

Canada's ongoing border shutdown has disrupted the supply chain of illicit drugs, making substances more ripe for contamination with toxic additives by dealers looking to stretch their products.

“Since COVID, we’ve seen things get much worse. The level of adulteration of the drug supply has increased," said Dr. Alexis Crabtree, a resident physician in public health and preventive medicine at the University of British Columbia.

Health precautions have narrowed access to services ranging from doctor visits to supervised consumption sites.

Physical distancing at overdose prevention sites can result in bottlenecks, deterring users who need immediate access or who simply don't want to stand in line in the cold.

“Service providers where possible are going to online provision of service," said Mark Haden, an adjunct professor at UBC's School of Population and Public Health.

"If you want to have a conversation with your doctor, Zoom is often the first choice. And homeless people don’t have access to Zoom."

The social isolation of life under pandemic restrictions can also breed new users or heavier substance abuse.

"The more connection you have with people who care about you, the less likely you are to develop an addiction," Haden said. "And right now we're disconnecting."

Pandemic protocols at social housing facilities may restrict visitors, further increasing the risk of an overdose if no one is nearby to spot one in progress.

For some, the drastic action taken by governments across the country to combat COVID-19 offers an example of health-care responsiveness, but for users it drives home the seeming indifference of authorities to their plight, which far predates the pandemic.

"People have been very hurt by seeing how quickly the government can react to a public health emergency when it chooses to do so," said Crabtree.

"People who use drugs and their allies have been really devastated to see that comparison."

In the short term, experts are urging expanded access to prescribed opioids via safer-supply programs.

In August, the federal health minister sent a letter urging her provincial and territorial counterparts to make regulated pharmaceutical options — safe supplies — available for drug users.

A study published in the Canadian Medical Association Journal in August showed that few overdoses involved people with prescribed opioids such as methadone and buprenorphine in their system, which Crabtree — the lead author — said should make doctors feel more comfortable prescribing them.

Another option is to declare the overdose crisis a public health emergency, a step that B.C. took in 2017, laying the groundwork for improved access to treatment and recovery services and broader use of overdose-reversing drugs such as naloxone.

It has also strengthened understanding of the epidemic through health surveillance, though more activists, allies and drug users themselves should be brought to the table, Crabtree said.

"They have knowledge that public health and policy-makers just don’t have."

On a larger scale, decriminalizing drugs could keep users from being driven underground and free up resources for public health that would otherwise go to law enforcement.

Provincial health officer Dr. Bonnie Henry has backed that notion. She called on the B.C. government to decriminalize possession of small amounts of drugs in a 2019 report, saying the province “cannot wait for action at the federal level.”


"As people become more involved with the criminal justice system, they become more criminal," Haden said.

"Jail is crime school in the same way that Harvard Law is upper-crust training school … you learn some stuff, you’re constantly told who you are, and you make connections.

"Ending drug prohibition would stop that process," he said.



This report by The Canadian Press was first published Nov. 15, 2020.

Christopher Reynolds, The Canadian Press


'Dear Dr. Banting,:' Dozens of letters to be featured in exhibit marking World Diabetes Day

© Submitted by Kat MacDonald The letters were compiled from an interactive station in Banting’s bedroom at the Banting House National Historic Site in London, Ont.

The historical site known as the birthplace of insulin is marking World Diabetes Day by launching a virtual exhibit showcasing some of the thousands of letters penned to Frederick Banting, the Canadian scientist who co-discovered the life-saving medication almost 100 years ago.

The exhibit, called Dear Dr. Banting, was co-curated by Kat MacDonald, a Western University student who interned at the Banting House National Historic Site of Canada in London, Ont., this past summer.

It was there in the house on Adelaide Street where MacDonald first saw the letters visitors from around the world had left in Banting's bedroom.

MacDonald, who was diagnosed with Type 1 diabetes three years ago, said she wanted to create this exhibit to connect people, especially during a time when people are being asked to physically stay apart.

"For me, when I read the letters, it just showed that I'm not alone in what I feel often as a Type 1 diabetic. Knowing that there's a community there with people that I've never even met — it's just so gratifying."

MacDonald wrote a letter herself which is featured in the virtual exhibit.

"I wouldn't be here without this discovery," she said.

"It's what saves my life on a daily basis and so being able to have the chance to write this letter and thank this man, even though he has passed, is cathartic."

In previous years, hundreds of people from across the world would gather at Banting House on World Diabetes Day to read some of the letters written to Banting.

Visitors would also get the chance to tour Banting's bedroom. It was there on an October night 100 years ago where Banting woke up in the middle of the night and penned the hypothesis that led to his famous discovery.

"People connect with that room and, in many ways, connect with Dr. Banting. It's this physical connection they have on this discovery that still affects them to this day," said Grant Maltman, the museum's curator.

While the gathering won't be possible due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, Maltman is hopeful people will be able to connect through the exhibit.

On Saturday, Banting House will also be rekindling the Flame of Hope.

The eternal flame, originally lit by the Queen Mother in 1989, was extinguished this summer in an act of vandalism. 

© Travis Dolynny/CBC The Flame of Hope at the Banting House in London, Ont. was extinguished by vandals on June 13, 2020.

"Symbols are important and we need them to give us hope and to inspire us, and that's what the flame has been doing for over 30 years until it was vandalized," Maltman said. "It reminds the public that we're still looking for a cure and that together we have to end diabetes."

People will be able to watch the rekindling of the Flame of Hope and check out the Dear Dr. Banting exhibit on Banting House's Facebook page.
RIP
Max Gros-Louis, longtime leader of Huron-Wendat First Nation, dead at 89
© Provided by The Canadian Press

Former Grand Chief Magella (Max) Gros-Louis, who championed Indigenous rights for more than 30 years as leader of the Huron-Wendat First Nation, has died at the age of 89.

Grand Chief Remy Vincent confirmed the news in a statement.

Born in 1931, Gros-Louis led the First Nation for a total of 33 years, from 1964 to 1984, from 1987 to 1996 and from 2004 to 2008.

According to the Huron-Wendat statement, during that time he worked to enlarge the nation's territory, brought the community to international prominence and raised awareness of Canada's mistreatment of Indigenous people.

He was one of the founding members of the National Indian Brotherhood, which became the Assembly of First Nations, and was a recipient of numerous awards including the Order of Canada and the Order of Quebec.

Vincent described Gros-Louis as one of the builders of the nation, and said it would be hard to sum up his contributions in a single statement.

"Grand Chief One Onti, on behalf of the Huron-Wendat Nation, we thank you for walking with us and by our side,” he wrote.

Ghislain Picard, the leader of the Assembly of First Nations of Quebec and Labrador, praised Gros-Louis as a respected political leader.

"His contribution to the influence of the First Nations as well as his sense of duty, community and fraternity made him an impressive leader that everyone will remember," he said in a statement.

"Although his departure leaves a great void, his imposing political, cultural and community legacy will remain etched in history forever."

A number of federal and Quebec politicians, including Premier Francois Legault, also took to Twitter to express their condolences.

"Quebec is losing a leader, a passionate defender of the rights and culture of Aboriginal Nations," Legault wrote.

"He contributed to advancing the collaboration and respect between our peoples."

Indigenous Services Minister Marc Miller also paid tribute to the longtime leader, describing him as a builder who advocated for dialogue, respect and harmony

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Nov 14, 2020

  • Huron-Wendat | The Canadian Encyclopedia

    https://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca/en/article/huron
    • The Huron-Wendat formed trade and military alliances with French explorers. To demonstrate French solidarity with their new allies, Samuel de Champlain and two French volunteers joined a Huron-Wendat raid against its enemies, the Haudenosaunee. In order to forge closer trade relations and obtain military aid from the French, the Huron-Wendat accepted missionaries. The Récollet missionaries were sent in 1615, and were replaced by the Jesuits in 1625. In 1633 and 1635, the Huron-Wendat were asked by Ch…
    See more on thecanadianencyclopedia.ca
  • Huron-Iroquois War

    option.canada.pagesperso-orange.fr/huron-iroquois.htm

    Huron-Iroquois WarThe Huron were the French’s closest allies and served as middlemen in the fur trade; many of them converted to Catholicism. They lived in an area which the French called Huronia, located between Lake Ontario and Georgian Bay. Their villages in the west formed a trade center where northern tribes brought their furs to trade against French goods.

  • Iroquois Offensive and the Destruction of the Huron: 1647-1649

    https://www.lermuseum.org/new-france-1600-1730/1600-1649/iroquois...

    Iroquois Offensive and the Destruction of the Huron: 1647-1649 The Iroquois Confederacy (the Five Nations-Mohawk, Seneca, Onondaga, Cayuga, and Oneida) launched a massive offensive against the Huron north of the Great Lakes in the summer of 1647.

  • Beaver Wars - Wikipedia

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beaver_Wars

    With the decline of the beaver population, the Iroquois began to conquer their smaller neighbors. They attacked the Wenroin 1638 and took all of their territory, and survivors fled to the Hurons for refuge. The Wenro had served as a buffer between the Iroquois and the Neutral tribe and their Erie allies. The Neutral and Erie tribes were considerably larger and more powerful than the Iroquois, so the Iroquois turned their attention to the north and the Dutch encouraged them in this strategy. At that time, the Dutch were the Ir…

    Wikipedia · Text under CC-BY-SA license
  • 1649 War between the Hurons and the Iroquois ...

    https://sites.google.com/site/thehuronintheeasternfrontier/1649-war...

    1649 War between the Hurons and the Iroquois In 1649 the Iroquois invaded Huron lands. The documentation by Father Ragueneau of these surprise attacks gives …

  • Canada’s foreign minister condemns ‘horrific’ attacks on civilians in Mozambique

    Canada's foreign minister says the government is "shocked and disturbed" by reports that dozens of civilians were beheaded in northern Mozambique
    .  
    © EPA/RICARDO FRANCO
     People sit outside an overcrowded house in an area that has become one of the main arrival points for displaced persons fleeing from armed violence raging in the province of Cabo Delgado, in the Paquitequete district of Pemba, northern Mozambique, 21 July 2020. Radical Islamist militant groups seeking to establish an Islamic state in the region, such as Ansar al-Sunna, have claimed responsibility for some of these attacks over the past year. The insurgent groups had taken control of strategic villages dotting the coast of the northern Cabo Delgado province – which are located more than 100 kilometers (62 miles) from the provincial capital, Pemba – for several days before they were driven out by troops belonging to the Mozambique Defense Armed Forces (FADM).

    The BBC, Al Jazeera and other outlets, citing state media and police, report over 50 people were attacked and beheaded over the weekend by militant Islamists in the Cabo Delgado province.

    Read more: 64 migrants found dead in cargo truck in Mozambique: authorities

    The province has been plagued for years by attacks from militants of the Al-Shabaab, which is aligned with the so-called Islamic State.

    In a tweet Tuesday evening, François-Philippe Champagne called the reported beheadings "an horrific and despicable act" and said his ministry will monitor the situation closely.

    "We're deeply concerned by the ongoing situation," he said. "Civilians must be protected and violence must stop."


    🇨🇦
    is shocked & disturbed by reports of the beheading of civilians in Cabo Delgado province, #Mozambique. This is an horrific & despicable act. We're deeply concerned by the ongoing situation. Civilians must be protected & violence must stop. We'll monitor the situation closely.

    We're deeply concerned by the ongoing situation. Civilians must be protected & violence must stop. We'll monitor the situation closely.

    — François-Philippe Champagne (FPC) 🇨🇦 (@FP_Champagne) November 11, 2020

    The reports say the Islamist militants attacked several villages in the province where they killed men and abducted women and children while setting homes on fire.

    Local state media, citing witness accounts, said the attackers took villagers to a football field in Muatide village, where the beheadings were carried out.

    Amnesty International said in a report last month that over 2,000 people have been killed in militant attacks since 2017. displacing more than 300,000 people who have fled their homes to escape the violence. Doctors Without Borders this week said that number has already grown to over 400,000.

    The militant group has been attempting to take advantage of local poverty to establish Islamic rule in the province, which is also home to a rich oil and gas deposit off its coast.

    Video: Death toll from Mozambique’s Cyclone Kenneth rises to at least 38

    Earlier this week, at least 40 people drowned after a boat carrying passengers fleeing the extremist violence sank, while another 32 were saved.

    State media has reported more than 12,000 refugees have arrived on 250 boats from Cabo Delgado in the last two weeks alone, citing a local government report that said more than half the arrivals were children.

    Doctors Without Borders said that around 100,000 internally displaced people have sought refuge in and around Pemba and "lack clean drinking water and are exposed to malaria with barely any protection, while they remain in unsanitary, crowded conditions, increasing the risk of an outbreak of measles, diarrhea or COVID-19."

    Read more: Mozambique leaders sign peace accord to end decades of civil conflict

    The medical charity said it requires urgent support from the Mozambican government to be able to meet the basic needs of the displaced people.

    Travel Canada has been advising Canadians to avoid all travel to certain parts of Mozambique "due to clashes between armed groups, security forces and residents," and says non-essential travel to the rest of Cabo Delgado province should also be avoided because of the "unstable security situation" there.

    "Our ability to provide consular assistance to Canadians in Cabo Delgado Province is extremely limited," the agency says.

    — With files from the Associated Press