Jack BuckbyCanadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has brought in economist Mark Carney as an adviser to assist with mapping out the government’s response to the COVID-19 pandemic.

The CBC reported how Carney left his position as governor of the Bank of England “after guiding it through Brexit uncertainty.” But it seems the media is as clueless to Carney’s political activism and ineptitude as the Canadian government.

Carney didn’t guide Britain through Brexit uncertainty. He arguably fuelled it by making unfounded or exaggerated claims about Britain’s future outside of the European Union. He armed members of Parliament who for years stood in the way of passing a Brexit deal with tales of doom and gloom that they used to constantly vote against fulfilling the government’s promise to leave the EU.

Britain’s former prime minister Theresa May’s nightmarish task of passing a Brexit deal – even a deal that didn’t truly follow through on the promise of leaving the EU in its entirety – was made infinitely more difficult by Carney and his anti-Brexit bias.

The Bank of England, under Carney’s leadership, issued dire warnings to the politicians and the people of Britain about the potential of voting to leave the EU, leaving the EU and of leaving the EU without a deal.


The sky is always falling in Mark Carney’s world by Jack Buckby


Carney began his scare campaign in the spring of 2016, before the referendum, announcing that the Bank of England would give banks billions of pounds to help avoid a financial crisis following a vote to leave the EU. He claimed Britain’s service economy would crumble as a result of voting to leave and that there would be a “reduction in financial stability.”

In August 2017, the Bank of England predicted 2017 exports would drop by 0.5 per cent as a result of the decision to leave. The bank also predicted business investment in the United Kingdom would drop by two per cent.

By 2018, however, we knew that year-on-year figures for quarter three showed an increase of 8.3 per cent in exports and a 1.7 per cent increase in business investment.

Carney was wrong about the immediate impact of the decision to leave the EU and wrong about the impacts of actually leaving.

In November 2018, Carney issued more warnings. The Bank of England published an analysis that suggested leaving the EU without a deal would see gross domestic product contract by eight per cent over one year. It was no less than a prediction of total societal and economic collapse. It was so extreme that he was forced to walk back the claims.

Britain has since left the EU and before the pandemic forced millions of people to stay at home for months, the economy was doing just fine. Following Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s huge election victory in December 2019 that saw his Brexit-supporting Conservative Party win seats it hadn’t won for a century, the U.K. was enjoying the highest business confidence levels in years. Unemployment was dropping and Brexit uncertainty was no longer impacting businesses because Carney had given up issuing baseless and damaging predictions of the coming apocalypse.

The decision, therefore, to bring in Carney to help guide the Canadian government’s response to the pandemic is interesting. Carney has proven his unwillingness to budge when it comes to his political agenda and priorities.

Carney’s political activism didn’t stop at Brexit. In December 2019, United Nations Secretary General Antonio Guterres announced that Carney would lead a new push to make sure the global financial sector embraced “climate emergency” issues. Carney insisted that “investing for a net-zero world must go mainstream” and initiated a push to completely shift global dependency away from fossil fuels well before renewable fuels have proven to be ready to take the reins.

Carney, it seems, is heavily influenced by political trends of the day – and in 2019, pre-COVID, it was the climate emergency.

The fact that Carney is now influencing decision-making in the Canadian government on the economic and political response to COVID-19 should concern Canadians.

Wendy Carlin, professor of Economics at the University College London, said in April 2020 that “Like the Depression and the Second World War, the COVID-19 pandemic will change how we talk about the economy and public policy.”

She was right and since then, many Western political leaders have indicated their willingness or desire to implement major transformative changes in the wake of the pandemic.

That same month, United States Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden said the COVID-19 crisis was a chance to make “institutional changes,” before going on to employ the economic adviser behind Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders’ campaign, Stephanie Kelton, who advocates modern monetary theory.

Trudeau has pondered the “opportunity” COVID-19 presents for Canada and how, in the wake of the virus, people can “think about what kind of future we want to build together.” And right on cue, CBC egged on the prime minister to be true to his word.

Carney will provide the Canadian government precisely what’s needed to transform the economy, should they wish to be as bold as Biden. Carney brings a wealth of experience in how to terrify politicians into doing something as radical and deeply troublesome as working against the instructions of the electorate.

He also knows what it takes to plow ahead even when proven wrong. And this time, he’s surrounded by political leadership more willing to accept his advice than the British Conservative government has been since 2016.

Carney may not be the best choice for Canadians who want a return to normal, but he’s ideal for people who want something radical, new and potentially dangerous.

Jack Buckby is a research associate with the Frontier Centre for Public Policy.

Jack is a Troy Media Thought Leader. Why aren’t you?

© Troy Media


The views, opinions and positions expressed by columnists and contributors are the author’s alone. They do not inherently or expressly reflect the views, opinions and/or positions of our publication.