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Canada's Liberal government embraces the tax-cutting agenda
of big business
By Keith Jones
4 March 2000
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The chief spokesmen and strategists for Canadian big business
have given their grudging approval to the new federal budget.
They consider it an important political victory that the Chretien
Liberal government has ignored public concern over the lamentable
state of Medicare and other public services and placed tax cuts
at the top of the national agenda. But big business deems the
five-year, $58 billion plan of personal income, corporate, and
capital gains tax cuts outlined in Monday's budget as no more
than a down payment.
The Liberals seem to have gotten the message that the
new economy requires not just occasional tax breaks here and there,
said Thomas D'Aquino of the Business Council on National Issues.
The head of Canada's most powerful business lobby group said he
was gratified the Liberals have actually committed themselves
to a five-year tax reduction strategy and the minimum amount of
that will be $58 billion. But, D'Aquino hastened to add,
quicker and deeper cuts are needed if Canadian companies are not
to lose ground to their foreign rivals. My argument would
be, we should be matching the Americans on corporate tax levels
right now, because the competition for people and business and
investment and innovation is nowit's not three years from
now, it's not five years from now.
D'Aquino's remarks were echoed by the president of the Canadian
Chamber of Commerce. Slow and steady just doesn't meet international
tests these days, said Nancy Hughes Anthony. Many
of our strongest competitors are busy slashing taxes as we speak.
The Globe and Mail, the traditional mouthpiece of Toronto's
banks and brokerage firms, said the budget for the 2000-2001 fiscal
year represented progress, but it is modest, and too much
of it is promised five years out. Conrad Black's National
Post, which has been even more strident than the Globe
in denouncing the tax burden on corporations and the well-to-do,
headlined its post-budget editorial It's a start.
Tax cuts: the new battle cry of big business
During their first mandate (1993-97), the Liberals won the
accolades of big business because they imposed massive spending
cuts that dwarfed those of their Tory predecessors and, in per
capita terms, exceeded those of all of Canada's G-7 rivals. The
Liberals cut the transfers that the federal government makes to
the provinces to pay for health care, post-secondary education
and welfare by fully one-third and drastically tightened unemployment
insurance eligibility requirements.
But in recent years, as the federal government has begun to
wrack up significant budgetary surpluses and the perception has
spread among Canada's elite that it has not reaped the same rewards
from the current economic expansion as its rivals to the south,
there has been a growing clamor from big business and the political
right for tax cuts.
This campaign, which has now been embraced by the Liberals,
underscores that the hue and cry about the federal deficit was
largely manufactured so as to provide a justification for sweeping
cuts in social spending and radical, regressive changes in social
policy. Having secured steep cuts in government support for public
services and the poor in the name of fighting the deficit, big
business wants to ensure that the share of the national income
appropriated by capital and the managerial and professional elite
continues to swell at the expense of working people. Thus it demands
that the lion's share of any budget surpluses be expended on tax
cuts, not reinvested in public and social services.
The Liberals are trying to sell their plan of tax cuts as a
boost to low- and middle-income Canadians. In this endeavor, they
are using the flat tax scheme of the Reform Party, the official
opposition, as a convenient foil. But in real dollar terms it
is the well-to-do, and above all the super rich, who will gain
the mostindeed, far and away the mostfrom the Liberals'
cuts to personal income taxes. According to one estimate, of the
$14 billion in annual tax reductions that are to kick in by fiscal
year 2004, 19 percent will go to those with incomes of more than
$100,000.
And the reduction in capital gains taxes is even more skewed
in favor of the most privileged. In 1996, more than 66 percent
of the total capital gains reported for income tax purposes went
to the 1 percent of highest-income earners.
The Liberal budget reduced personal income, capital gains and
corporate tax rates, and announced the phased elimination of a
surtax on higher income Canadians, but it made no mention of the
regressive Goods and Services Tax (GST). Abolition of the GST
was one of the principal planks in the election platform on which
the Liberals returned to power, after nine years in opposition,
in 1993. But no sooner had they regained office than the Liberals
shelved their promise on the GST.
Medicare on the chopping block
As part of their ongoing campaign to push the Liberals still
further to the right, the big business media, or at least much
of it, has portrayed the Liberals' plans to spend $13.3 billion
more over the next four years as spendthrift. In fact, the federal
government continues to spend billions less on programs and transfers
today than in 1993, even before inflation and the increase in
the population are taken into account. In his last three budgets,
Finance Minister Paul Martin has not increased real, per capita
federal program spending by a single dollar. Moreover, Martin
has vowed that should a recession throw the government's budgetary
projections off, he stands ready to impose still further cuts.
The days of deficit are gone, declared Martin in his
budget speech. And they are not coming back.
Well over 20 percent of the total new spending announced by
the Liberals in this week's budget$3.17 billionis
earmarked for the Canadian Armed Forces and for tightening border
security.
The Liberal budget provides not a dime for social housing,
although homelessness has emerged as a major problem in Toronto
and Canada's other major urban centers. Asked why they are ignoring
the homeless, the Liberals retort that the provinces and municipalities
can finance social housing projects from their part of a $4 billion
infrastructure fund. But provincial politicians have ridiculed
the idea, saying the state of the country's highways, water systems
and bridges is such that all the new money is already accounted
for.
Cuts to the unemployment insurance program played a key role
in eliminating the federal deficit, with Ottawa seizing the annual
surpluses the Employment Insurance fund piled up after the government
cut benefits and restricted eligibility. Whereas in the early
1990s more than 70 percent of the unemployed were eligible to
collect jobless benefits, today less than 40 percent qualify.
But despite record federal surpluses, no one in political or
business circles will even entertain discussion of returning to
the pre-1992 rules for jobless benefits. Faced with evidence that
women were among the biggest losers from the eligibility changes,
the Liberals have modified the rules governing parental leave,
but otherwise all the cutbacks remain.
The new federal budget provides just $2.5 billion over four
years (or $625 million per year) in additional money to the provinces
to help pay for post-secondary education, health care and welfare.
This increase means that the provinces will receive on average
$15.5 billion a year for the next four years under the Canada
Health and Social Transfer (CHST). This compares with some $18
billion in fiscal 1993-94.
In the five years since 1995, the federal government has reduced
its transfers to the provinces for public and social services
by $35 billion. These cuts have led to massive increases in college
and university tuition, as well as a sharp deterioration in the
quality of post-secondary education.
But it is in the health care sector that the effects of the
cuts have been most keenly felt. There has been a wave of hospital
closures. Long waiting lists for the treatment of even life-threatening
conditions, and hospital emergency ward closures due to overcrowding,
are now commonplace across the country.
Nonetheless, popular support for the maintenance of a free,
universal health system remains strong. Opinion polls have repeatedly
shown the majority of the public supports reinvesting money in
the health care system over tax cuts. Last year there was strong
public support for strikes by nurses in several provinces, including
Quebec and Saskatchewan, although the strikes were in defiance
of the law.
In recent weeks, federal Health Care Minister Alan Rock has
conceded that the very future of Medicare is at stake. Before
the tax cuts and other changes announced in this week's budget,
the Finance Ministry predicted the federal government stood to
accumulate a surplus of about $100 billion over the next five
years. Yet the Liberals are not prepared to provide more than
$2.5 billion in new funding for health care, post-secondary education
and welfare.
Faced with a barrage of criticism over their failure to inject
significant sums of money into a health care system that is hemorrhaging
from years of cutbacks, Rock and Martin are now saying that Ottawa
might provide additional funds. But they want to tie any further
increases in federal funding to major structural changes to Medicare.
According to news reports, Rock is championing a homecare scheme,
the purpose of which would be to provide cheaper care by shortening
hospital stays and shifting some of the burden for providing care
to patients' families.
The provinces object to the Liberals' spearheading a restructuring
of Medicare because health care is a provincial responsibility
under Canada's constitution and several of them want to go much
further than the Chretien government in allowing the private sector
to provide frontline health care services.
Ontario Tory Premier Mike Harris was quick to seize on the
meager increase in the CHST to raise the banner of privatization.
He said the lack of federal funding for health care is forcing
his government to consider user fees and a greater role for the
private sector in health care. We look forward with interest,
said Harris, to hearing whether we're supposed to get more
private-sector money, whether individual Canadians are supposed
to pay more, or just what it is we're supposed to cut.
Saskatchewan's New Democratic Premier Roy Romanow, whose party
in the past has laid claim to being the father of Medicare, is
urging that a Royal Commission on health care be struck so as
to determine what core services Medicare should continue
to cover.
While Ottawa and the provinces dispute how Canada's universal
public health care is to be cut back, all are agreed that this
is necessary. Reports the Globe and Mail's Jeffery Simpson,
no serious politician in the country ... believes the health-care
system as currently structured and financed can be sustained.
See Also:
Canada
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