Close X
Sunday, November 17, 2024
ADVT 
National

Auditor General Says B.C. Needs To Know More About Tax Breaks It Gives

The Canadian Press, 10 Oct, 2018 11:13 AM
    VICTORIA — British Columbia's auditor general says politicians need to pay more attention to the billions of dollars they provide every year in tax breaks to support government programs and policies.
     
     
    Carol Bellringer said Tuesday in a report that the breaks in the form of tax expenditures can continue on for decades without oversight on either their effectiveness or if they're still required.
     
     
    She said the government's reporting of tax expenditures and how they relate to spending has been largely unchanged for the past 25 years.
     
     
    B.C. government tax breaks were estimated at $7 billion in the 2016-2017 budget year, the report says. The government's direct spending total in the budget for programs such as health care and education was $48.7 billion.
     
     
    "Tax expenditures are a significant component of government fiscal plans but legislators may not have all the information they need to determine whether tax expenditures continue to achieve government's policy objectives," Bellringer said in a telephone news conference.
     
     
    She said the tax breaks give support to government social, economic and environmental policy objectives but providing those benefits comes at a cost of lost revenues.
     
     
    "Essentially, a tax expenditure is forgone revenue," Bellringer said. "It's money government doesn't collect from taxpayers, but could if it didn't offer the tax breaks. Tax exemptions, allowances, rate reductions, deferrals and credits are all types of tax expenditures."
     
     
    She said the government decided not to charge provincial sales tax on the purchase of new bicycles to help meet its environmental goals, but that means it gives up about $23 million in taxes every year.
     
     
    Bellringer said B.C.'s homeowner grant — introduced in 1957 to relieve the pressure of rising property taxes and encourage home construction — is a decades-old tax expenditure that has undergone few changes or reviews since its introduction.
     
     
    "It may no longer be effective in supporting government's policy objectives," she said.
     
     
    Bellringer pointed to the federal government as an example of a progressive approach to addressing the issue by clearly posting its most recent eight years of tax expenditures.
     
     
    B.C.'s tax expenditures are included in an appendix section of its most recent budget, she noted.
     
     
    "They're accepting it year after year and it rolls forward and continues to be in the program," Bellringer said. "It's important for (politicians) to appreciate when they are voting on the budget for the year that the numbers for program expenses do not include tax expenditures."
     
     
    B.C.'s Ministry of Finance said in a statement Tuesday it is important that politicians and others have access to complete information relating to B.C.’s tax expenditures and it will consider improvements to the reporting of such expenditures.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. Lawsuit Seeks Damages After Women Secretly Recorded In A Work Bathroom

    B.C. Lawsuit Seeks Damages After Women Secretly Recorded In A Work Bathroom
    The former operator of a wedding decor supply business in British Columbia is facing more legal action following his conviction for secretly recording two workers while they used the employee washroom.

    B.C. Lawsuit Seeks Damages After Women Secretly Recorded In A Work Bathroom

    Khalistan Issue Has Derailed Focus Of Trudeau's Visit: Herb Dhaliwal

    Khalistan Issue Has Derailed Focus Of Trudeau's Visit: Herb Dhaliwal
    Canadas first Cabinet minister of Indian origin, Herb Dhaliwal, says the focus of the on-going visit of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to India has been derailed by the Khalistan issue.

    Khalistan Issue Has Derailed Focus Of Trudeau's Visit: Herb Dhaliwal

    B.C. Man To Be Sentenced Next Week After Admitting To Murder Of His Mother

    B.C. Man To Be Sentenced Next Week After Admitting To Murder Of His Mother
    VANCOUVER — A British Columbia man has pleaded guilty to the second-degree murder of his mother.

    B.C. Man To Be Sentenced Next Week After Admitting To Murder Of His Mother

    Newfoundland Judge Rules Sexist Slur Against Reporter Was Not A Public Disturbance

    Newfoundland Judge Rules Sexist Slur Against Reporter Was Not A Public Disturbance
    ST. JOHN'S, N.L. — A judge has ruled a notorious sexist slur aimed at a reporter in St. John's, N.L., was vulgar and offensive but wasn't a crime under the circumstances.

    Newfoundland Judge Rules Sexist Slur Against Reporter Was Not A Public Disturbance

    Canada 150 Saw Record Number Of International Tourists: Statistics Canada

    OTTAWA — Statistics Canada says international tourism set an annual record during Canada 150 last year, with 20.8 million trips of one or more nights.

    Canada 150 Saw Record Number Of International Tourists: Statistics Canada

    Commercial Airplane Incidents, Accidents Jump In 2017, Safety Board Says

    A national pilots association is raising alarm bells over new accident numbers showing a year-over-year jump in incidents involving commercial airliners.

    Commercial Airplane Incidents, Accidents Jump In 2017, Safety Board Says