One thing a lot of people are not talking about is the real nature of our economy. There was a time where B.C. was basically a natural resource province. Mine the coal, cut the trees, fish the salmon, tax the companies doing it. That was a mainstay of the PST, along with consumers paying for goods, and with so many ludicrous exceptions and complexities it would make the most ardent policy makers blush. It was a masterwork of beuracracy and special interests. Yes, I used to have to file PST returns and GST returns, and what a fucked up overly complicated shake your head bang a brick wall chunk of red tape that was trying to keep two separete tax rules straight. So now we have laid off miners, suffering forestry workers, non-profitable fishers, yet a thriving service industry. And guess what? Who are the big buyers of services? Businesses. That's right, businesses by services by the truckload. When was the last time you spent $2.4 million anually on services? Why do you think economists support the HST? It ain't because they love the government. No way. But they do show the integrity to recognize a simple tax with low transaction costs that better reflects our current economy is a progressive economic move. No government in their right mind would bring in a PST. If the No vote wins, we will have the best and lowest tax for people in Canada, with the exception of Alberta. So we can move forward even if we hate the government (when was the last time you loved your goverment? Wanna buy a fast ferry?), or we can move on with reality and a balanced economy of service and resource sectors contributing to the social programs we care about. If the yes vote wins, life will go on, but we will remain with a paralyzing fucked up tax system hoping that once again we can tax the trees, fish, and minerals to fund healthcare and education. I am hoping straightening out the HST is just the start, and straightening the healthcare and educations systems comes next. It pains me to see such good people working in such wasteful organizations.
So what about the biggest lie of all? That the HST will kill the province. People will stop going out to pubs and restaurants. Small service providers will shut down. Well, take a look. Sure creature comforts are a little more expensive, but the sky did not fall, as the opposition said it would. In fact restaurants are booming and we have a tax surplus, proving the HST can and should be reduced, now that the pessimiests were proven wrong. They lied to us about the effects of the HST. It is time to move forward. I am going out to buy beer and natchos, and gladly pay the HST on them.