WHEREAS the world church has been called to develop Christian, social and political ethics based on the vision of a "just, participatory and sustainable" society as the foundation of a wise stewardship of all the resources with which we have been blessed by God; and
WHEREAS the United Church at its 29th General Council adopted policies which apply this vision to energy and environmental questions; and
WHEREAS the Division of Mission in Canada has encouraged the church to consider the vision of the kingdom, announced in the ministry of Jesus, and realized in just and right relations among humankind; and
WHEREAS the state of the present Canadian and world economy represents a state of moral crisis, in which capital, rather than labour, property rather than people, are asserted as the dominant principle of economic and social life, and inequality and injustice increase rather than get reduced; and
WHEREAS, as the United Church has repeatedly pointed out in study documents, our economic predicament in Canada is significantly due to our dependency on global markets dominated by large, often foreign-controlled corporations; and
WHEREAS in a global, economic crisis, the needs of the poorest must be put ahead of the priorities of a market dominated by the power of the rich; and
WHEREAS the income share of the bottom 20 per cent of Canadians is only 4.1 per cent and that of the top 20 per cent is 42.5 per cent of the total (1980 figures Statistics Canada), and the share of the bottom 20 per cent actually dropped from 4.4 per cent (1951) to 4.1 per cent (1980); and
WHEREAS the social assistance allowances in all provinces are below the Statistics Canada poverty line, in some areas have fallen behind cost of living increases by as much as 25 per cent, and in many cases are not indexed; and
WHEREAS the present economic crisis has caused massive layoffs, large numbers of farm and business bankruptcies, more than 11 per cent of our labour force unemployed, and a cost to our economy from unemployment alone of a minimum of $50 billion (estimate for 1982, Social Planning Council of Metropolitan Toronto); and
WHEREAS there flows from prolonged unemployment extreme human hardship, despair and degradation, with severe consequences of increased crime, alcohol and drug abuse, family break-down, loss of self-worth, depression and even suicide; and
WHEREAS many provincial governments have taken action which restricts universal accessibility to fundamental social services, and have cut back staff, funding and services in a wide variety of socially supportive projects and programs; and
WHEREAS many governments in Canada have legislated cutbacks, enforced wage settlements and back to work laws, and have increasingly moved to hire non-unionized, temporary contract workers, thus putting at risk the basic right of workers to participate in trade unions and to free collective bargaining; and
WHEREAS, despite the fact that war/defence industries offer less employment opportunities per dollar invested than comparable civilian production, the Canadian government is increasing defense spending at a rate of 10 to 18 per cent per year; and
WHEREAS the United Church has affirmed its support of a guaranteed annual adequate income as a foundation for fundamental dignity and security for each Canadian; and
WHEREAS full employment in Canada is the primary single road toward social equity and well-being for Canadians; and
WHEREAS a significant need for economically-accessible housing remains in Canada, and housing ranks high as a generator of employment in a variety of industries and regions; and
WHEREAS the United Church at its 29th General Council called for policies and funds to develop new energy resources with a major shift toward soft energy options, including conservation, and such a policy would provide many more jobs than current policies which emphasize mega-projects and nuclear development; and
WHEREAS fundamental aspects of our social system, including income support for the poor, public participation in investment decisions, trade union rights and universally accessible social services are under vociferous attack from those who put the rights and liberties of property above those of people; and
WHEREAS the church has already demonstrated an ability and potential to act on its own right or in coalitions for social and economic justice and on behalf of the poor and those who seek to organize themselves for economic justice:
THEREFORE BE IT RESOLVED:
GC30 1984 ROP, pp. 106-107, 325-329