Pubdate: Thu, 06 Nov 2003 Source: Globe and Mail (Canada) Copyright: 2003, The Globe and Mail Company Contact: http://www.globeandmail.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/168 Author: Mary Lynn Young Note: Mary Lynn Young is an assistant professor at the University of British Columbia's School of Journalism. DARK SIDE OF B.C.'S ECONOMY GROWS LIKE WEED When a home in a tony Vancouver neighbourhood makes an international marijuana magazine because it houses a large growing operation, you know that things aren't necessarily what they seem on the West Coast. The provincial economy is no different. British Columbia is experiencing a financial downturn, at the same time that it is home to the most vibrant underground economy in Canada, according to the Business Council of B.C. The economic dark side is estimated to account for 15 per cent of the province's GDP or $20-billion a year. This figure exceeds the annual sales of its forest industry. What does this economic alter ego mean for the struggling province? The B.C. government isn't realizing a lot of income that it would usually receive, and some sectors, such as housing, are being inflated. In the end, this financial yin and yang -- which tend to work in tandem with both going up and down at the same time -- misrepresent British Columbia's fiscal picture and cost its residents money. Some of the largest effects of the underground economy, which includes both legal and illegal activity, can be found in the drug economy and the booming B.C. housing market. According to the RCMP, British Columbia has become a huge producer and exporter of marijuana, which by some estimates now ranks as the province's largest cash crop. The provincial drug economy is such a boon -- pegged at almost $7-billion or 40 per cent of the total marijuana trade in Canada -- that Forbes magazine made B.C. bud its cover story for its recent issue. The article contends that high-tech marijuana growing operations are already big business here and about to "get bigger." In legal industries, a percentage of revenue would wind up in the tax stream as support for the provincial economy. In an illegal industry, such as the drug trade, some of the money still trickles down into the economy, but not enough to avert a bigger tax burden being placed on those B.C. residents who are already paying their share. The hot B.C. housing market is another area that has been affected by the underground economy. Recent Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp. figures project that British Columbia will have the highest percentage of growth in housing starts nationally in 2003-04. Here, the effects of the underground economy are more subtle -- but important nonetheless. Cheerleading from the local media and real estate industry pundits aside, the already overpriced Vancouver real estate market is probably receiving a boost from the underground economy. For instance, Jock Finlayson, executive vice-president of the business council, questions where the money for new sales is coming from, when key economic indicators such as output per person, long considered a benchmark of economic success, indicate that the province has been performing abysmally. Local analysts have suggested that income from the total underground economy is partly fuelling the housing boom. British Columbia's economy includes the highest proportion of self-employed people in Canada, a large service industry and the well-known marijuana trade. Self-employment offers opportunities to conceal income that are unavailable to most people with paid jobs, while service sector industry transactions are often difficult for tax officials to police. The underground economy has another impact on housing sales that relates to labour and quality. McMaster University PhD candidate Lindsay Tedds, who is one of five specialists in the underground economy in Canada, says a large proportion of new-home builders in British Columbia have reported the financial dark side to be a critical issue. Their worry arises from concern that an overheated housing market will increase the demand for an underground labour supply from the construction industry. Ms. Tedds says that houses built by builders and construction workers using underground labour may not be as structurally sound as those built by reputable builders, and this could lead to a greater incidence of problems with new homes. In the end, British Columbia may have the most vibrant underground economy in Canada, but it is also part of a nationwide alternative economy, which analysts suggest is alive and growing. The reason for this boom is related to the overall tax burden in this country. Academic studies on the underground economy have found a significant link between high taxes and the size of the underground economy, with reductions in the tax burden related to lower illicit activity. "It is important for the government to understand the relationship between all policies, such as taxes, the regulatory burden, perceived fairness, and enforcement of tax evasion," Ms. Tedds says. And it is incumbent on policy makers to address these issues to encourage people to participate in the larger tax structure. The B.C. government would be well advised to consider examining these tensions and the erosion of its tax base provincially. Accessing some of the undeclared income generated through the underground economy would be a welcome boost to provincial coffers. Mary Lynn Young is an assistant professor at the University of British Columbia's School of Journalism. - --- MAP posted-by: Josh