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135 Pages·2013·1.32 MB·English
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Capital, Accumulation, and Crisis: Surveying the Neoliberal Waterscape of Municipal Privatization in Canada by Michael Keith Lang B.A., Kwantlen Polytechnic University, 2011 A Thesis Submitted in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of MASTER OF ARTS in the Department of Sociology  Michael Keith Lang, 2013 University of Victoria All rights reserved. This thesis may not be reproduced in whole or in part, by photocopy or other means, without the permission of the author. ii Supervisory Committee         Capital, Accumulation, and Crisis: Surveying the Neoliberal Waterscape of Municipal Privatization in Canada by Michael Keith Lang B.A., Kwantlen Polytechnic University, 2011                   Supervisory Committee William K. Carroll, Supervisor Department of Sociology Peyman Vahabzadeh, Committee Member Department of Sociology iii Abstract Supervisory Committee William K. Carroll, Supervisor Department of Sociology Peyman Vahabzadeh, Committee Member Department of Sociology   While the outright privatization of water services has declined globally, it has been replaced with public-private partnerships (P3s) in the government procurement and delivery of water services, and increasingly at the local level. This research finds that such initiatives are on the rise in Canada, and considering the overall record of failure that has amounted from varied types of water privatization thus far, it seeks to analyze this expanding waterscape from a critical perspective. More specifically, by historically situating the privatization of Canadian municipal water in a political-economic context that identifies its relation to contemporary (neoliberal) capitalism, this research examines how the focused state commitment to water P3s is indicative of the processes of neoliberalization. I argue that regulatory and budgetary changes since the economic crisis of 2008 have formed an institutionalized policy apparatus that essentially forces needy municipalities into long-term contracts with private firms, therefore establishing sustained sites for capital accumulation. This thesis concludes with a discussion concerning the implications that such a “partnership” will have for municipal autonomy, organized labour, and the environment, particularly in light of the intensifying state focus on international free trade. iv Table of Contents Supervisory Committee  ...........................................................................................................  ii   Abstract  ......................................................................................................................................  iii   Table of Contents  .....................................................................................................................  iv   List of Figures  ...........................................................................................................................  vi   Acknowledgments  ...................................................................................................................  vii   Dedication  ..............................................................................................................................  viii   Chapter  1:  Introduction  .........................................................................................................  1   Methodology  .......................................................................................................................................  3   Chapter  2:  Political-­‐Economic  Context  .............................................................................  7   Neoliberalism  .....................................................................................................................................  7   Neoliberalism  as  Ideology  ..............................................................................................................  8   Neoliberalization  ............................................................................................................................  12   Neoliberal  Canada  ..........................................................................................................................  16   Capital  Accumulation  ....................................................................................................................  22   Contradictions  of  Accumulation  ...............................................................................................  27   Capital  and  Crisis  ............................................................................................................................  29   Canada,  The  Crisis,  and  Austerity  .............................................................................................  33   Chapter  3:  Water  Governance  and  Public-­‐Private  Partnerships  ..........................  38   Introduction  .....................................................................................................................................  38   Section  1:  Water  Governance  .....................................................................................................  38   Traditional  Water  Management  in  Canada  ...........................................................................  38   The  Development  of  Neoliberal  Waters  .................................................................................  39   Commercialization  and  Corporatization  ................................................................................  42   Water  Privatization  .......................................................................................................................  43   The  Global  Effects  of  Water  Privatization  ..............................................................................  46   Summary  ...........................................................................................................................................  49   Section  2:  Public-­‐Private  Partnerships  in  Canada  ..............................................................  50   Why  Not  P3s?  ...................................................................................................................................  53   Not  P3s!  ..............................................................................................................................................  58   P3s  as  Privatization  .......................................................................................................................  64   The  Waterscape  of  Canadian  Municipal  P3s  .........................................................................  66   Summary  ...........................................................................................................................................  68   Chapter  4:  Post-­‐Crisis  Policy  Change  and  Water  Sector  Neoliberalization  .......  71   Introduction  .....................................................................................................................................  71   P3s  Since  the  Crisis  ........................................................................................................................  71   The  Neoliberalization  of  Municipal  Governance  .................................................................  79   P3  Policy  and  Municipal  Water  .................................................................................................  84   Summary  ...........................................................................................................................................  88   Chapter  5:  Water  P3s  and  Private  Capital  Accumulation  ........................................  89 v Introduction  .....................................................................................................................................  89   Municipal  Water  P3s  as  a  Spatial-­‐Temporal  Fix  ..................................................................  89   Accumulation  by  Dispossession  or  Public-­‐Private  Expropriation?  ..............................  92   The  Implications  of  International  Trade  ...............................................................................  94   The  Impact  on  Labour  ..................................................................................................................  97   The  Secondary  Contradiction  of  Municipal  Privatization  ................................................  98   Resistance  to  P3s:  Abbotsford-­‐Mission,  BC  ...........................................................................  99   Alternatives  to  Privatization  ....................................................................................................  102   Conclusions  ....................................................................................................................................  104   Future  Research  ...........................................................................................................................  106   Bibliography  ..................................................................................................................................  108 vi List of Figures Figure 1: Degree of Private-sector Involvement in P3s  ................................................................  53   Figure 2: P3s in Municipal Water, Per Year  ....................................................................................  67   Figure  3:  Canadian  Municipal  Water  P3s,  2008-­‐2013  .............................................................  69 vii Acknowledgments I want to first thank the individuals working in the sociology department at UVic for their support though this whole process. Particularly Zoe Lu, for her quick and lighthearted feedback at many stressful moments, and my supervisor, Bill Carroll, for taking me on while he was abroad yet still providing valuable insight and direction as this thesis came together. I am also grateful to the cohort of 2011 and the other friends I have made here in Victoria, who have helped to ease the uncertainty that has accompanied this experience from the beginning. Thank you to my old friends for the campfire debates that helped me to situate my beliefs and learn to stand by them, and to Pam and Carl, for their love and support from the first day their daughter brought me home. I am truly indebted to my parents and family for their tolerance and encouragement as I drifted about in my early twenties before the surprising return to school, and for their ongoing love throughout. Finally, I want to thank my partner, Kim, for her relentless encouragement, her patience, and her sacrifice in joining me in Victoria while I pursued this education. It would not have felt right without you at my side. viii Dedication This thesis is dedicated to the memory of Professor Ken Hatt (1938-2012). Chapter 1: Introduction Equitable and effective water management is of growing global concern, as decisions regarding how best to meet increasing social demand intersect with political and economic structures which govern this activity. The use of market-based governance techniques has come to characterize contemporary water management practices in much of the world (Anderson & Leal, 1988; Winpenny, 1994), as governments struggle to provide these basic needs for their citizens in an increasingly austere waterscape. The privatization of water services1 has been a common result of this challenge (Bakker, 2010); a shift that is indicative of the general escalation of neoliberalism and the overshadowing presence it has for water resource management in particular (Furlong, 2010). In recent years, private-sector involvement in water services has been re-packaged in the form of public-private partnerships. P3s, as they will be referred to here, are joint ventures in which public infrastructure and/or services is delivered by both public and private stakeholders, with varying degrees of finance, development, ownership, and responsibility (Loxley, 2010). In Canada, P3s are becoming the chosen method for public infrastructure and service procurement, and are increasingly recognized by proponents as a necessity because of funding shortfalls (Brubaker, 2011; Dupuis & Ruffilli, 2011). This state commitment to P3s has been ill received by some due to the overall inability of P3s to achieve their purported benefits, often resulting in higher social and economic costs than traditional procurement (Loxley, 2010; Vining & Boardman, 2008). As this thesis will discuss, there is a growing state focus on expanding P3s into the Canadian municipal water sector, an activity that warrants further analysis considering the general opposition that surrounds the increasing private-sector involvement in water services (Bakker, 2010; Pigeon, McDonald, Hoedeman, & Kishimoto, 2012). With the post-2008 neoliberal economic crisis as a focal point, this thesis will seek to determine the underlying rationality for the privatization of municipal water and to                                                                                                                 1 In this context, “water services” refers to the treatment and delivery of drinking water and the treatment and disposal of wastewater. 2 Following Bakker (2010), governance can be understood as the “practice of coordination and decision 2 conceptualize P3s as sites of capital accumulation. Integral to the sustainability of capitalism, accumulation requires renewed investment in order to ensure future growth (Marx, 1990). In moments of capitalist crisis, the mechanisms through which recovery is achieved shed light on both the resilience of capitalism (Panitch & Gindin, 2010) and its techniques for maintaining accumulation (Harvey, 1978). So, viewed in light of the collective failure of previous privatization initiatives to meet the water-related needs around the world (Prasad, 2006; Budds & McGranahan, 2003; Hall & Lobina, 2012), I aim to critically examine the expanding for-profit market of Canadian public-private partnerships, and to explore how this increase can be recognized as an enterprise of capital accumulation. To these ends, this research will be guided by three research questions. Understanding the connections between neoliberal governance, economic crisis and the response of the Canadian state is important in determining, in general, how the increase of P3s in Canada can be understood as a site of capital accumulation. This provides a foundation for investigating recent neoliberal policy and budgetary changes which help to institutionalize a supportive apparatus of what can be recognized as the incentives to private-sector involvement in Canadian water services. We will then be in a position to better recognize what contradictions may arise in relation to this activity, and how these contradictions provide a lens through which to view resistance and alternatives to P3 water privatization. Chapter one will provide a detailed account of neoliberalism and the processes of neoliberalization, followed by a theoretical review of capital accumulation, crisis, and contradiction. This will support a concluding discussion concerning how the lack of funding for social spending – arguably the main catalyst for the post-crisis increase of P3s in Canada – is justified, as a product of neoliberal governance2 and the discourse of austerity. In chapter two I discuss water management, detailing the shift to governance practices that epitomize neoliberalism and facilitate accumulation, before examining                                                                                                                 2 Following Bakker (2010), governance can be understood as the “practice of coordination and decision making between different actors, which is invariably inflected with political culture and power” (p. 8). While she appears to use this term in a relatively apolitical way, so to discuss water management practices from multiple perspectives, I recognize its applicability in critically characterizing the institutional and ideological practices that are part and parcel of neoliberalism.

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I want to first thank the individuals working in the sociology department at UVic for their support .. presents neoliberal orthodoxy as a tool of ideological reproduction, capable of aligning personal .. instigation of bilateral and regional trade, such as the Canada-U.S Free Trade Agreement in 198
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