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There are moments in history when local politics have national, and even international, significance. Saskatchewan is currently living one of those moments.

Have no illusions. The recent provincial budget is about more than reducing government expenditures. It is an act of class warfare, and the beginning of a process of redefining the society you live in — massively reducing the social role of the state, and transferring yet more wealth to the already wealthy. There are three budgets left in the Saskatchewan Party’s current mandate, and they will be worse than the one just announced. They will be about “permanent austerity,” not short-term belt-tightening.

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We’re being sold a lie. As Nobel laureate economist Paul Krugman has noted, “All of the economic research that allegedly supported the austerity push has been discredited. On the other side of the ledger, the benefits of improved confidence failed to make their promised appearance. Since the global turn to austerity in 2010, every country that introduced significant austerity has seen its economy suffer, with the depth of the suffering closely related to the harshness of the austerity.”

The budget is disingenuous on its own terms. There is a mountain of evidence which demonstrates that taking the knife to education and social programs costs society more over the long term, while dramatically increasing social suffering in the short term. In Ontario in 1997, one employed person in 40 worked for the minimum wage — but by 2015 it reached one in eight. In B.C., poverty among seniors rose from a low of 2.2 per cent in 1996 to 12.7 per cent in 2014 — and many seniors have incomes just above the poverty line. Single women face a particularly high risk of economic insecurity in old age — one-third of single senior women in B.C. live below the poverty line. This level of immiseration and social abandonment is shameful in a country as wealthy as Canada.