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Canada: business "flabbergasted" by British Columbia
government's tax cut
By Keith Jones
14 June 2001
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On its first day full day in office, British Columbia's new
right-wing government announced cuts to personal income taxes
far beyond anything promised in its election manifesto. The cuts,
which are heavily weighted in favor of the upper middle class
and the rich, will cause a large government revenue shortfall
that will be used to legitimize future social spending cuts. They
are also meant to underline the determination of the newly elected
Liberal government to make good on its pledge to institute major
policy changes during 90 days of decision.
Today's announcement, declared Liberal Finance
Minister Gary Collins, puts the rest of the country and
the rest of the world on notice. British Columbia is competitive
again. We are open for business.
During the election campaign, the BC Liberals promised to make
the rate of taxation on the first $60,000 in income the lowest
in the country by the end of their first term in office.
Under the scheme they unveiled June 6, all personal income
tax rates are to be reduced by 25 percent by next January 1. The
cuts are to be implemented in three stages, the first stage of
which has been made retroactive to the beginning of this year.
Not only will these cuts give BC the country's lowest taxation
rate on the two lowest taxation brackets, they reduce the tax
rate on incomes over $85,000 from the highest in the country to
the second lowest.
While the Liberals are manipulating statistics to claim that
in percentage terms their tax cuts are of greatest benefit to
those with low incomes, the cuts are heavily skewed in favor of
the well-to-do. British Columbians making $20,000 a year will
see their taxes drop by about $236 in 2002, as compared to $1,947
for those earning $80,000, and $7,800 for those with incomes of
$200,000.
Moreover, the Liberals' tax cuts will make the tax system considerably
less progressive.
The tax rate in the lowest tax bracket will drop from 8.4 percent
to 6.05 percent in 2002a drop of 2.35 percentage points.
The highest bracket, meanwhile, will fall from 19.7 percent to
14.7 percenta decline of five percentage points, more than
twice as large. Thus the well-to-do are not just getting a bigger
tax cut in real dollar terms, but even when measured as a percentage
of their total income.
According to Jock Finlayson, vice-president of the Business
Council of BC, the province's must powerful business lobby group,
the scope and speed of the Liberal tax cuts came as a pleasant
surprise. He told the Globe and Mail, When
the press release first came over our fax machine, I thought it
was a joke. This is one of the biggest tax cuts in Canadian history
... I was flabbergasted.
The BC tax cuts have been welcomed by the right across Canada
for their potential to trigger a tax-cut bidding war, with provinces
seeking to lure investment by competing as to which can offer
the lowest tax rates. Such a war will mean increased
fiscal pressure for cuts in state expenditure on social and public
services, especially if the economy plunges into recession. BC
Premier Gordon Campbell has sent a message to other premiers...,
exalted a National Post editorial. Gentlemen re-start
your tax-cutting engines. Ontario Finance Minister and Deputy
Premier Jim Flaherty hailed the BC announcement as brilliant.
Campbell has dismissed concerns that the tax cuts will drive
the provincial budget into a deficit, although when in opposition
he railed against the New Democratic Party (NDP) for deficit spending.
Campbell claims the cuts will generate so much economic activity
that the shortfall caused by the tax cuts will be more than offset
by the resulting increased government revenue. But when pressed,
he reiterates the Liberals' pledge to eliminate any budget deficit
within three years.
During the election campaign, the Liberals shed crocodile tears
over the deterioration in public health care. Declining real wages
and ever-increasing workloads have caused large numbers of nurses
and other health care workers to leave their chosen profession
or move to the US. But Finance Minister Collins has said the incoming
government will not offer the province's nurses a penny more than
did the previous NDP regime and threatened the nurses with strike-breaking
legislation if they do not end an overtime ban.
According to Collins, the nurses' overtime ban is putting patients'
health and lives at risk, which only goes to prove the nurses'
point that the province's health care system is chronically understaffed.
Asked about the nurses' overwhelming rejection of the last government
wage offer, Collins declared, I can be pretty hard-line
too.
The new government is also under pressure from the corporate
media to force an end to a 10-week-old strike by Vancouver transit
workers. The workers are resisting attempts to force them to accept
greater work-rule flexibility, including part-time
driverschanges deemed as a necessary by management to prepare
the way for privatization. In its lead editorial yesterday, BC's
largest daily, the Vancouver Sun, urged the Liberals to
legislate an end to the strike and even to goad the transit workers
into defying the law.
The government ... can expect a fair degree of confrontation
... as it faces several tough negotiations with its own employees
as well as a fight over promised labor code changes that threaten
union sinecures. So it's no big deal if the union balks at being
legislated back to work and the fireworks start a little early.
One of the most important changes the Liberals have promised
to implement during the next three months is to make education
an essential service, which would effectively strip
public school teachers and school support staff of the right to
strike.
The BC Liberals, despite their name, are political allies of
the Canadian Alliance and the Tory governments in Ontario and
Alberta. Their road to power was paved by the social-democratic
NDP and the trade union bureaucracy. During a decade of NDP rule,
the social democrats policed capitalist austerity, imposing steep
social spending cuts, breaking strikes and competing with the
right in championing law and order.
Recognizing that the Liberals' right-wing agenda will provoke
great popular opposition, much of the capitalist media have counseled
the government to amend parliamentary rules and grant the NDP
official opposition status in the legislature. That the Liberals
have spurned this advice is indicative of their intention to use
their massive parliamentary majoritythey hold 77 of the
legislature's 79 seatsto try to intimidate all opposition
and press ahead with their big business agenda at full throttle.
See Also:
British Columbia elections:
social democrats pave reaction's road to power
[18 May 2001]
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