Christmas in Fernie - Mountain Magic and Small-Town Charm
December 20, 2024
Budget 2012 lays a firm foundation for the future, putting British Columbia on the right path to eliminate the deficit, protect public services, and build a more competitive economy that attracts jobs and investment, Finance Minister Kevin Falcon announced today.
Budget 2012 shows the deficit forecast for 2011-12 improved by $594 million over second Quarterly Report projections to $2.5 billion. The Province forecasts a deficit of $968 million in 2012-13, and surpluses of $154 million in 2013-14 and $250 million in 2014-15.
Over the next three years, government will contain spending growth to an annual average of two per cent while continuing to protect health and education funding. The Ministry of Health budget will increase $1.5 billion over the three-year fiscal plan to nearly $17.3 billion in 2014-15. While continuing to achieve key health outcomes that lead the country, government will work to reduce the rate of growth in health spending through an ongoing focus on identifying additional best practices for delivering care and finding administrative savings.
Funding to school districts will increase, despite a trend of declining enrolment. In addition to the $4.7 billion a year districts will receive for the next three years, government is investing an additional $165 million to establish a fund to deal directly with issues of class composition. The annual facilities grant for maintenance again totals $110 million in 2012-13.
Government remains committed to funding critical social services and is reallocating contingency funds to the ministries of justice and social development, where caseloads continue to rise.
Budget 2012 introduces new tax measures that benefit seniors, families and businesses in B.C., including:
• The B.C. First-Time New Home Buyers’ Bonus of up to $10,000.
• The B.C. Seniors’ Home Renovation Tax Credit of up to $1,000.
• The Children’s Fitness Credit and the Children’s Arts Credit.
Budget 2012 also supports the B.C. Jobs Plan with tax measures for businesses that:
• Eliminate the provincial jet fuel tax for international flights.
• Provide an additional $3 million for the Small Business Venture Capital Program.
• Extend the Training Tax Credit program.
• Introduce new training tax credits for shipbuilding and ship repair industry employers.
• Make permanent the existing temporary municipal tax rate caps for B.C.’s major port terminals.
Given the uncertain fiscal environment, the small business corporate tax rate will be maintained at 2.5 per cent, and will be revisited after the fiscal situation has improved. The fiscal plan also includes a temporary, one-point increase in the general corporate income tax rate to 11 per cent, effective April 1, 2014. The requirement to implement this tax measure will be re-evaluated in next year’s budget. Additionally, to help spur economic activity throughout the province and generate needed revenue, government will release non-strategic surplus assets for sale.
Over the next year, the government will undertake a comprehensive review of the revenue-neutral carbon tax. The review will cover all aspects of the carbon tax—both positive and negative—including revenue neutrality, and it will consider the impact on the competitiveness of B.C. businesses, and in particular B.C. food producers.
Budget 2012 forecasts British Columbia’s taxpayer-supported debt-to-GDP ratio will be 17.6 per cent in 2012-13, 18.2 per cent in 2013-14, and peak at 18.3 per cent in 2014-15, before trending downward once again. Taxpayer-supported capital spending on schools, hospitals and other infrastructure across the province over the next three years is expected to total $10.7 billion.
The government forecasts British Columbia’s economy will grow by 1.8 per cent in 2012, 2.2 per cent in 2013 and 2.5 per cent per cent in 2014 – a forecast that is prudent relative to the independent British Columbia Economic Forecast Council.
For more information: http://www.bcbudget.gov.bc.ca/2012/highlights/2012_Highlights.pdf
Sorry to be an NDP buzz-kill, but now that Adrian Dix has been anointed by pollsters as the public’s top choice for premier, it’s time for a little reality check.
So let’s dig into the recent archives to see just what Dix and his party have promised and demanded so far, how much it would cost and how the heck they’d pay for it:
HEALTH CARE: “[The NDP] would be looking to be among the highest in Canada in terms of per-capita support for health care,” Dix has said. “That would be a high priority for us.”
A high priority, and a pricey one. Estimated annual cost, according to B.C. Stats: $4.15 billion.
EDUCATION: Dix has been cautious when commenting on the teachers’ union and their astronomical contract demands, but he’s generally supportive of their position. Teachers and their supporters “are not asking for much,” he told the NDP convention in December.
The teachers estimate their demands at $565 million, while the government calculates it at $1.3 billion. So let’s be generous and take the teachers’ number.
Estimated cost: $565 million. CHILD CARE: “I am committed to expand child care, to initiate a provincial child-care system and to pressure Ottawa to play a major role in such a system,” Dix said during his leadership bid.
Good luck trying to convince Prime Minister Stephen Harper to go along with that one! B.C. would be on our own.
Estimated cost: The mind boggles. But consider Quebec’s child-care program costs $2.1 billion a year, more than double what B.C. spends on earlylearning and child-development programs.
ANTI-POVERTY STRATEGY: Reducing the growing gap between rich and poor is a top priority for Dix, but how would he do that and what would it cost?
The New Democrats have repeatedly called for an “anti-poverty strategy” that NDP MLA Nicholas Simons said could include higher welfare rates and “massive infrastructure spending on affordable housing.”
Estimated cost : $2 billion, according to Simons.
ADVANCED EDUCATION: Dix promised last week to restore non-repayable student grants cut by the Liberals. During his campaign for the NDP leadership, he also promised to cut interest payments on unpaid student loans.
Estimated cost: $148 million. EVERYTHING ELSE: I didn’t have room for increased spending on legal aid, and sports community and cultural grants, and infrastructure spending, and raises for all the public- sector unions already drooling at the thought of a Dix government.
How would he pay for it all? So far Dix has promised to raises taxes on banks and corporations. But now that he’s the top choice for the top job, the pressure will build for a fuller explanation.
By Michael Smyth, The Province