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Village Squire, 1976-02, Page 7Big business, big labour and big government are putting the squeeze on the little businessman. BY JOHN BULLOCH John F. Bulloch Jr. is president of the Canadian Federation of Independent Busi- ness. He has returned recently from Tokyo, where he participated in the International Symposium on Small Business. It is no secret that the Canadian economy is in trogble. The economic Council of Canada is pointing to a period of slow growth unless we are willing to accept massive immigration and take the necessary tough measures to improve the nation's productivity. The Prime Minister is warning Canadians about the need to change our values, habits and institutions. In a recent telecast Pierre Trudeau explained the anti-inflation program as a massive intervention, made necessary because of the failure of the free market system. No one will argue that the present economic system is not working; but its failure is not the failure of the free market but the failure caused by the intervention of governments in the marketplace, and the overpowering pressence of Targe power groups impervious to market forces. These power groups themselves are products of the state. New insights into this relationship came to light- in the course of the international Symposium of Small Business in Tokyo. Sponsored by the Japanese Government and the Japanese National Federation of Small Business Associations, the Symposium was composed of small business spokesmen, government otticials and academics from 33 nations and from the United Nations as well. In a paper presented there, Graham Bannock, former Research Director of Britain's Bolton Commission studying small and medium enterprises showed that increases in the size of the public sector are accompanied by decreasing employment and output among small firms. Corporate concentration of power stems not from new technology or economics of plant size, but from the grouping together of firms under common worship Concentration of power - at the expense of smaller firms - is a function of government spending, tax laws, the capital markets and marketing practices. Because of increasing affluence, public attention is diverted to social issues which inflate the size, complexity and cost. of government. The burden bears heaviest on small firms. Taxes on payroll, on income, on capital gains, on sales, on succession, by reducing profitability and the ability to finance growth, encourage owners to sell out; and the efforts of larger firms to obtain special tax advantages merely accelerate the process. Capital incentives, the ability to deduct interest costs of borrowing for acquisitions, the right to offset the losses of one firm agains the profits of another - these are only a few examples of the way the game is rigged in favor of concentration. Concentration of corporate power cannot be studied in isolation from the growth of government. Big labor is the inevitable result of concentrations in business and government, with monopoly power granted by the state. The terms public sector and private sector are outdated. Two quite different elements are at work in the economy. First there is what may be called the planning sector, within which are grouped the major concentrations of power. These are the ingredients of the corporate state - big business, big government and big labor —and their outgrowths are the corresponding attempts by the state to control them. The Anti -Inflation Board is only the latest in a series of measures aimed at correcting abuses of power. The other element in the economy is the market sector characterized for the most part by the entry and exist of owner -manag- ers and the checks and balances of the forces of supply and demand. This sector employs more than 55 per cent of all working Canadians. In Japan, by contrast, the existence of the two sectors is reflected in economic policies. Recognizing that a healthy market sector, because it difuses power, guards against power's abuse, the Japanese Government since 1945 has pursued a deliberate policy of promoting the market sector as the key agent in democratizing Japanese society. In Japan over 70 per cent of the work force is. employed by small and medium enterprises, and 78 per cent of industrial workers are employed by small manufactur- VILLAGE SQUIRE/FEBRUARY 1976, 5