Flaherty Unveils “Jobs & Growth
Budget”
(Ottawa, ON) Today in the House of Commons, Finance Minister
Jim Flaherty, unveiled what he termed a “Jobs and Growth
Budget.” The 2010 federal budget is Mr, Flaherty’s fifth.
While saying that the government’s Economic Action Plan is working
and that Canada has weathered the economic storm better than most, the
economy remains the central concern. As a result, the government will
provide further stimulus spending of nearly $20 billion by fully
implementing the entire Economic Action Plan this year.
The budget also announced several initiatives aimed at modernizing
Canada’s transportation infrastructure -- $10 million over three
years to support the legal, financial and technical work for the new
Windsor-Detroit bridge; $50.5 million over the next two years for
capital improvements to the Jacques Cartier and Champlain bridges in
Montreal; $175 million for Marine Atlantic; and $28 million for ferry
services in Atlantic Canada. Also, $87 million will be invested over two
years to help the Canada Border Services Agency improve its information
systems and scanning equipment.
At the same time, the budget introduces a new era of restraint, or at
least a slowing in the rate of government spending particularly in
national defence, foreign aid and government administration. The plan is
to reach a “near budget-balance” within five years, based on
current projections.
There are no major tax increases or decreases in the budget. The
budget proposes to expand the Capital Cost Allowance class for clean
energy generation through specified heat recovery systems. The remaining
tariffs on manufacturing machinery and equipment will be eliminated. The
government will not reverse its previous commitments to reducing
corporate income tax rates to the lowest in the G7 by 2012.
However, there was again no mention in the budget of the first
promise made by the Prime Minister during the 2008 election campaign to
reduce the excise tax on diesel fuel by 50 per cent, sometime during the
government’s mandate. While it is possible that the government
could still meet the commitment, no one in the trucking industry is
holding their breath. In fact, last year the Canadian Trucking Alliance
suggested that the government not reduce the tax, but instead earmark
the revenue that would otherwise have been eliminated towards programs
to help spur investment in new equipment by the industry as suggested in
the CTA enviroTruck initiative.
“It appears we are back to where we were in 1984 and 1985,
where the excise tax on diesel fuel serves no policy purpose other than
to pay down the deficit,” says the CEO of CTA. “Not that
paying down the deficit should not be a priority, it is. But is it fair
that it be done on the back of the commercial transportation industry,
relying upon an archaic and regressive form of tax on our members’
primary business input at the same time as the industry needs to re-tool
and is being challenged to reduce its GHG emissions?”
Some other sectors – including forestry, agriculture, small
business, tourism, shipbuilding and culture -- which were deemed to have
been hard hit by the recession are in store for some modest support of
$1.3 billion.
The Minister also announced further steps to reduce the paperwork
burden on business, by establishing a commission of parliamentarians and
private sector representatives to reduce red tape. Existing or recently
terminated work-sharing agreements will be extended by an additional 26
weeks, to a maximum of 78 weeks.