Close X
Monday, November 11, 2024
ADVT 
National

Finance Minister Bill Morneau Rejects Idea Of Independent Employment Insurance Fund

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 25 Mar, 2016 12:27 PM
    OTTAWA — The Liberals have no plans to make Canada's employment insurance fund independent of the federal government, Finance Minister Bill Morneau said Thursday.
     
    "I think the current system works," he said in a round-table interview with The Canadian Press.
     
    Morneau said new measures to help the unemployed are included in his recently tabled budget.
     
    The NDP and Bloc Quebecois, however, have long wanted the fund to be independent to prevent governments from using surpluses to reduce budget deficits or pay down debt.
     
    Employment insurance surpluses were $3.5 billion in 2014 and $2.2 billion in 2015, with the money going directly into government coffers.
     
    The government predicts an EI surplus of $1.2 billion in 2016 and a deficit in 2017 when the Liberals plan to introduce a reduction in premiums.
     
    Contributions to the EI fund will be lowered that year to $1.61 per $100 earned from $1.88 — a sharper decrease than the Liberals promised during the election campaign.
     
    Morneau said during the interview an actuarial report is conducted every year to help the government set the ideal insurance premium.
     
     
    "We want to be transparent," he said. "I think with the report, we can explain clearly the premium required for employers and employees. So that's our decision for now."
     
    NDP MP Guy Caron said workers and employers should determine for themselves how to spend the money in the fund and decide whether to lower premiums.
     
    "Instead of increasing accessibility, particularly during difficult economic times, they're  lowering the premiums," he said in a telephone interview. "That was the choice of the government. Once again, there weren't any consultations with those who pay the premiums."
     
    He said 850,000 unemployed people in Canada don't qualify for EI benefits.
     
    The government says new policies introduced in Tuesday's budget will give another 50,000 people access to EI benefits.
     
    Caron said it was a step in the right direction but that too many people are still left out.
     
    The NDP MP added that even though the EI fund looks like it will be balanced over the next few years, it might not stay that way.
     
    "We could once again reach a surplus," he said. "And once again, because the fund is not independent, the money will go into government coffers as has been the case for the last 25 years."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Rescuers In B.C. Work To Recover Two Sledders Killed In Avalanche

    The two victims were among a group of seven sledding northwest of Blue River on Monday night, said Alan Hobler, a spokesman for the Kamloops Search and Rescue team.

    Rescuers In B.C. Work To Recover Two Sledders Killed In Avalanche

    RCMP Find Pair Suspected In Emily Sheane's Burnaby Hit-And-Run At Creston Motel

    RCMP Find Pair Suspected In Emily Sheane's Burnaby Hit-And-Run At Creston Motel
    RCMP received a call Sunday morning about two suspicious people who had booked into a hotel.

    RCMP Find Pair Suspected In Emily Sheane's Burnaby Hit-And-Run At Creston Motel

    Calgary MLA First Denies, Then Admits To 'Flipping Bird' In House At Opposition

    Calgary MLA First Denies, Then Admits To 'Flipping Bird' In House At Opposition
    Calgary Hawkwood MLA Michael Connolly also admits that when he was initially accused of doing so, he mislead the house by denying it.

    Calgary MLA First Denies, Then Admits To 'Flipping Bird' In House At Opposition

    Children Under 10 More Likely To Die In Home Fires: Death Review Panel

    Children Under 10 More Likely To Die In Home Fires: Death Review Panel
     A death-review panel launched by the British Columbia coroners' service has determined that children under 10 years old were far more likely to die in residential fires that those from ages 11 to 18.

    Children Under 10 More Likely To Die In Home Fires: Death Review Panel

    Former Lawyer Hopes B.C. Chief Judge's Leadership Will Lead To Family Law Reform

    Former Lawyer Hopes B.C. Chief Judge's Leadership Will Lead To Family Law Reform
    VANCOUVER — British Columbia's top judge is heading a group that aims to reform the province's family and civil justice system.

    Former Lawyer Hopes B.C. Chief Judge's Leadership Will Lead To Family Law Reform

    How Alcohol Ups Breast Cancer Risk

    How Alcohol Ups Breast Cancer Risk
    Drinking alcohol can put you at increased risk of breast cancer by enhancing the levels of a cancer-causing gene, new research has found.

    How Alcohol Ups Breast Cancer Risk