Saturday, April 18, 2015

Dazed and Confused


While reading Conrad Black's recent National Post article on building monuments, the quote to which he referred from an article in the Globe and Mail " ... the millions of victims of Communism surely pales in comparison to the victims of Capitalism" sprung off the page at me. 


Can someone help me to understand why so many people hate Capitalism? 

After all, Captalism supplies the majority of Canadian jobs and funds all public service jobs; it has created the standard of living that we all cherish today; it generates the tax revenues that fund all public services in the country including our sacrosanct public health care, education and public safety enterprises; it has solved societal and individual problems too numerous to count. 

I think Led Zeppelin's "Dazed and Confused" was written for me in my efforts to understand this misguided and bedevilling hatred.

Sunday, March 15, 2015

The benefits of "precarious employment"


The benefits of "precarious employment"

Recently I attended a "town hall" event entitled "Just-In-Time Jobs: Getting by in a world of part-time, contract and precarious work." Matt Galloway of the CBC Morning Show hosted it. This 90-minute event showcased the short term disadvantages and hardships experienced by people who work in non-salaried jobs.

As a professional recruiter, with 34 years of experience in the employment industry, I have personally witnessed several advantages that many workers have enjoyed while developing their skills and work history via this so-called "precarious employment" career path. What are these advantages?

For starters, these workers go where the need is greatest for their accumulated skills, knowledge and experience. This frequently results in higher wages for the worker and greater productivity for the employee - a win-win scenario for everyone, including the economy.

In addition, many of these workers actually prefer temp or term employment for the flexibility it can offer while they use their non-work hours to pursue other personal and/or professional interests.

One often-expressed advantage is that the "gypsy" work style of the career contractor provides opportunities to experience many different work environments. From each job, they learn and take "lessons learned" into future workplaces to their benefit and to the benefit of their employers.

Another claimed advantage is financial. The fact that self-employed contract workers are able to reduce their taxable income by claiming tax-deductible business expenses is a very common reason why many workers choose contract work.

To my way of thinking, however, the single biggest benefit is the least obvious one, but one that I have witnessed hundreds of times throughout my career. It can be summarized in one phrase: "Necessity is the mother of invention." By this, I mean that all successful, "precariously- employed" workers have internalized the critical lesson that their accumulated work history, skill sets, specialized knowledge, professional references, personal productivity and adaptability are all key to remain gainfully employed in our uncertain, modern job markets.

Survival is the #1 need of all human beings. When your financial survival instincts are continually challenged, you will continually seek ways to improve your "working game" in order to compete successfully in our modern, highly competitive job markets. In a nutshell, the best guarantee for job security is marketable skills. It is never advisable to become complacent about professional self-improvement.

Lauren Friese, one of the four CBC town hall panellists and  founder of TalentEgg - a national online career resource for students and recent graduates- advises her clients to think of themselves in entrepreneurial terms - to develop a "Me Inc" mindset. Like all successful entrepreneurs, these young workers are encouraged to continually re-evaluate their one-person business models in order to make the calculated and market-informed adjustments necessary to carve out their own personal road to success. Great advice!

 The timing of the CBC "town hall" event was interesting because many striking teaching assistants from York University and the University of Toronto were in attendance. Since I have been employed for 28 years without a salary- relying 100% on sales commissions- my view of their demands for more job security was quite foreign to me. Negotiating job security is unrealistic in this day and age for anyone other than possibly those employed in the public service where they enjoy the unique privileges of labour legislation that enables them to employ the bullying and force-based "negotiation" tactics of collective bargaining. I found myself wondering what makes any of them so "special" that they should be entitled to these legal privileges. Why should they have the power to coerce job security advantages for themselves when these no longer exist for the majority of the other taxpayers who are employed in the private sector?

It's unfortunate that the organizers of this CBC town hall event didn't choose to highlight any of the benefits of "precarious employment" as described above. Human capital is a terrible thing to waste in a world in which change is the only constant, and the ability to successfully adapt to change is the best strategy for long-term success.

For the sake of the greater good, and for creating a fair and level employment playing field for all citizens isnt it time to eliminate the regulations that allow labour unions to distort this nation's workplaces? These regulations only serve to shelter the hundreds of thousands of public sector, unionized workers from becoming the best working professionals that they can be. Surely, by freeing our public service employees to experience the same competitive, "precarious employment" job market forces, the beneficial Me Inc self-reliant attitude will stoke the productive energies of all of our citizens equally. The ultimate benefits undoubtedly will be greater long term success and a higher standard of living for everyone.








Wednesday, February 18, 2015

Publicly paid Socialist criticizes RRSP and TFSA accounts

Armine Yalnizyan, Senior Economist employed by the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives, dissed the idea of increasing limits for TFSA and RRSP accounts during her appearance as a "business commentator" on CBC Radio's number one morning show, Metro Morning, which reaches a million listeners in the Greater Toronto Area. She claims that these programs are under-utilized in Canada while forgetting that these same programs are essential to many Canadians working with in private sector who do not enjoy the state-funded pension plans of public servants like her.
As a politically active Libertarian who is forced to pay taxes to maintain the viability of the CBC - a state-owned and operated propaganda engine which perennially sides with advocates like Ms. Yalnizyan for Big Government and Big Labour interests - I would like to propose that all citizens, and especially our  Citizen Entrepreneurs, be given the right to withdraw their tax support for the CBC. Its bad enough that we are forced to pay for this idealogical blunderbuss, but  it vexes me that the good work done by active Libertarians everywhere to deliver the message that  "less government means more individual freedoms for ALL citizens equally) is virtually blasted to smithereens by the CBC buckshot of anti-freedom messages paid for by state taxation. Please remember that Libertarian political parties and their messaging efforts receive no state funding, unlike the CBC.
Armine may have earned an M.A. in Industrial Relations from University of Toronto, a bilingual B.A. in economics from Glendon College, York University, and spent a year of economics at Université de Bordeaux, France... But this only goes to support my claim that her academic training was provided by pro-Big Government and Pro-Big Labor , state-funded institutions of "higher learning" funded entirely by the tax payer without choice. Armine's Life Lens looks nothing like my own, nor that of the millions of citizens who do not enjoy a paycheck and pension plans that are funded by coerced taxation.
To me, the face and voice of Ms. Yalnizyan is my personal poster child for the anti-freedom, anti-business thinking that muddles the minds of our richly-entitled government bureaucrats. I regularly call the Morning Show host Matt Galloway to complain about her Marxist views and hope to have her removed from the show, or at least introduced not as a "business commentator" but as a "Marxist" or "Socialist" commentator. I invite you all to do the same.

Gene Balfour
Thornhill 
I have run on 3 occasions s the Ontario Libertarian Candidate for Thornhill and plan my first run for the Libertarian party of Canada later this year