Close X
Tuesday, November 26, 2024
ADVT 
National

Liberals reject NDP call to hike GST rebate

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 18 May, 2022 03:57 PM
  • Liberals reject NDP call to hike GST rebate

OTTAWA - The federal government is looking to help Canadian families feeling the pinch of inflation without contributing further to the problem, the prime minister said Wednesday as his government rejected a call from the NDP to hike GST rebates and the Canada Child Benefit.

NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh wanted the government to double the GST rebate and add $500 to every Canada Child Benefit as inflation continues to rise.

Statistics Canada reported Wednesday that the consumer price index rose 6.8 per cent in April, the highest monthly increase since January 1991. Overall food costs rose 8.8 per cent, and gasoline, stimulated by the effects of the Russian invasion in Ukraine, soared 36 per cent, compared to April a year earlier.

"Salaries have only gone up by 3.3 per cent," Singh said during question period. "All of this to say, workers are experiencing a massive pay cut all the while oil and gas companies are enjoying massive profits. The prime minister can do something instead of just standing by."

Singh wants Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to fund the benefit increases by redirecting a $2.6-billion tax credit promised in the recent budget to help companies build carbon capture and storage systems. Most of that would likely go to oil and gas companies, and the NDP says it is a massive subsidy to companies that are making record profits because of the same soaring gas prices harming Canadian families.

The NDP brought an opposition day motion this week seeking support from other parties for the idea. They only got that support from the Bloc Québécois, as the Liberals and Conservatives both voted against the motion Wednesday afternoon.

Earlier in the day, Trudeau said the GST rebate and Canada Child Benefit are already indexed to rise each year by the annual rate of inflation.

For help to families, he instead repeated his claim that the national child care deals Ottawa signed with provinces are saving families thousands this year.

"I was in Newfoundland and Labrador yesterday to highlight the fact that families in Newfoundland are going to save about $5,000 this year because of what we've done on child care," he said. "We continue to look for ways to support families without adding to the inflationary pressures in the economy."

The government is benefiting from inflation in increased GST revenues, collecting $42.2 billion between April 2021 and February 2022, compared with $27.3 billion in the same period in 2020-21, and $36.4 billion in that 11-month period in 2019-20.

The 2020-21 revenues were affected by COVID-19, as gas prices fell and people stayed home.

The GST rebate this year is set to rise to $306 per adult, up $7 from last year, reflecting an annual inflation rate of 2.4 per cent. Children will get $161, up $4 from 2021.

The maximum Canada Child Benefit is rising $114 to $6,997 this year.

Inflation from 2022 won't be reflected in those benefits until 2023.

The Liberals did give a one-time GST rebate top up in April 2020 and to the child benefit in May 2020, when the pandemic was in its early days and millions of Canadians were losing their jobs or seeing their hours cut back.

About 12 million people receive the GST rebate and 6.4 million Canadian children qualify for the child benefit.

The NDP did not say how much the proposed benefit hikes would cost. The Liberal budget included just $35 million for the carbon capture tax credit in this fiscal year. The $2.6 billion cost cited is spread over five years with more than half not expected to be spent until 2026-27.

The carbon capture and storage tax credit is a significant disagreement between the Liberals and the NDP, which formed a confidence and supply deal earlier this year to maintain the minority Liberal government until 2025.

The NDP agreed to support the Liberals on major confidence votes that could defeat the government and force an election, in exchange for action on certain issues including following through on the long-promised elimination of fossil fuel subsidies.

Singh maintained from the start the agreement did not mean the NDP would support the government in everything and said this week this tax credit and environmental policy are places of major disagreement.

The NDP maintain the carbon capture credit is a massive subsidy to the oil sector, while the Liberals say the promise was to eliminate only inefficient subsidies that helped companies pollute more.

Carbon capture and storage is a relatively new — and mostly unproven — technology to capture greenhouse gas emissions at their source and store them again underground.

The Liberals say the tax credit is not an inefficient subsidy.

MORE National ARTICLES

Report on housing costs examines municipal roles

Report on housing costs examines municipal roles
Prof. Carolyn Whitzman, a University of Ottawa housing and social policy expert, says policy changes ranging from requiring municipal governments to approve more multi-housing developments to introducing provincial policies that make more government land available for housing could help the problem.

Report on housing costs examines municipal roles

B.C. offers 4th vaccine dose to seniors

B.C. offers 4th vaccine dose to seniors
Provincial health officer Dr. Bonnie Henry said Tuesday that people over age 70 in the community, Indigenous people 55 and up and those who are clinically extremely vulnerable will also be included in a vaccination campaign that will ramp up through the spring.    

B.C. offers 4th vaccine dose to seniors

B.C. to increase housing, services near transit

B.C. to increase housing, services near transit
Changes to the Transportation Act were introduced Tuesday, which the government says would allow the province to shape growth around transit, increase housing density and build connected communities.

B.C. to increase housing, services near transit

Elderly Sikh man who has family in BC attacked in New York City, target of hate crime

Elderly Sikh man who has family in BC attacked in New York City, target of hate crime
According to New York police the assault on Nirmal Singh was unprovoked. Singh said that he was allegedly punched from behind on a Sunday morning walk around 7 a.m. on 95th Avenue and Lefferts Blvd. in Richmond Hill.    

Elderly Sikh man who has family in BC attacked in New York City, target of hate crime

Suspect arrested and charged following two alleged arsons targeting the same residence

Suspect arrested and charged following two alleged arsons targeting the same residence
Just two days later, the same owner reported he had found what appeared to be a Molotov cocktail device inside his house, but the container had not ignited. Police say they reviewed video surveillance and arrested a suspect in his mid-40s who remains in custody.    

Suspect arrested and charged following two alleged arsons targeting the same residence

Coquitlam RCMP is asking for the public’s help in identifying suspects in two separate shootings on Chickadee Place

Coquitlam RCMP is asking for the public’s help in identifying suspects in two separate shootings on Chickadee Place
A male victim was located and had suffered a gunshot wound. The victim’s 9-year-old son, who was in the back seat of the vehicle at the time of the shooting, thankfully escaped completely unharmed.

Coquitlam RCMP is asking for the public’s help in identifying suspects in two separate shootings on Chickadee Place