Close X
Wednesday, December 4, 2024
ADVT 
National

Newfoundland And Labrador Raises Taxes, Fees In Election Year Budget

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 30 Apr, 2015 12:34 PM
    ST. JOHN'S, N.L. — Taxpayers in Newfoundland and Labrador are going to pay more as the provincial government looks for ways to cope with a downturn in oil and commodity prices in the budget it tabled Thursday.
     
    The most noticeable tax change is an increase in the harmonized sales tax, which jumps by two percentage points to 15 per cent on Jan. 1, 2016.
     
    Even with the new revenue, the government's $8.1-billion budget for 2015-16 still forecasts a $1.1-billion deficit.
     
    Finance Minister Ross Wiseman said the budget reflects the province's economic reliance on resources.
     
    "We're optimistic that oil will recover, commodity prices will recover," he told a news conference. "We're a resource province, and one of the challenges of being a resource province, you're exposed to those kinds of vulnerabilities.
     
    "What we're trying to do now is manage our way through that process."
     
    Wiseman is also forecasting deficits totalling $1.6 billion for the next three fiscal years, with economic contraction and higher unemployment through 2018.
     
    The province's real gross domestic product is predicted to shrink by 0.3 per cent this year, and by 1.6 per cent in each of the next two years. Unemployment is projected to go from 12.4 per cent this year to 13.3 per cent by 2018.
     
    For now, Wiseman said the Progressive Conservative government has chosen a balanced approach of borrowing, tax hikes and modest spending increases because it doesn't want to shock the economy.
     
    The Tories have held a majority in the legislature since 2003 and are expected to call an election this fall.
     
    The budget includes 35 fee hikes on everything from drivers' licences to public swimming. The higher fees are expected to raise about $18 million.
     
    The government is also bringing in new tax rates for the highest income earners.
     
    A modest $3-million surplus is forecast for the 2019-20 fiscal year, when the province expects oil prices return to US$90 a barrel. 
     
    The province relies on offshore oil revenues for about one-third of its revenues. It has been hit hard since Brent crude slid to about US$66 a barrel from a high of US$115 last June.
     
    For 2015-16, the budget is anchored on an average price of US$62 a barrel. The last budget relied on US$105 but the average was just over US$83.
     
    The province took in $1.6 billion in oil royalties in 2014-15 compared to the $2.4 billion it originally forecast. It's projecting $1.2 billion in oil royalties this fiscal year.
     
    Net debt is predicted to rise to $11.5 billion in 2015-16 from $10.2 billion.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    From Cradle To Grave: New Brunswick Sees More Deaths Than Births For First Time

    From Cradle To Grave: New Brunswick Sees More Deaths Than Births For First Time
    FREDERICTON — Coles Island School in New Brunswick has taught children for 58 years but this may be its last. Over time, enrolment has dwindled to a point where the school now teaches 30 students from kindergarten to Grade 5. 

    From Cradle To Grave: New Brunswick Sees More Deaths Than Births For First Time

    Tories To Tackle Thorny Issue Of Lump Sum Payments To Wounded Veterans: Sources

    Tories To Tackle Thorny Issue Of Lump Sum Payments To Wounded Veterans: Sources
    OTTAWA — The system of awards for the pain and suffering of the country's most severely wounded soldiers is about to be overhauled as the Harper government attempts to defuse a volatile issue within the angry veterans community.

    Tories To Tackle Thorny Issue Of Lump Sum Payments To Wounded Veterans: Sources

    Avoiding Syrian Air Defences A Concern As Commons Set To Approve War Expansion

    Avoiding Syrian Air Defences A Concern As Commons Set To Approve War Expansion
    OTTAWA — How to avoid missile batteries and navigate defensive radar systems in Syria are among the issues preoccupying military planners as Parliament debates the merits of expanding and extending Canada's Middle East mission.

    Avoiding Syrian Air Defences A Concern As Commons Set To Approve War Expansion

    Vancouver Shares Olympic Lessons With Toronto Ahead Of Pan Am Games

    Vancouver Shares Olympic Lessons With Toronto Ahead Of Pan Am Games
    TORONTO — In their effort to fight congestion during this summer's Pan Am and Parapan Am Games, organizers in Ontario are taking cues from those who have been there, done that.

    Vancouver Shares Olympic Lessons With Toronto Ahead Of Pan Am Games

    Ken Dryden Teaches Class Of The Future To Five Universities Simultaneously

    Ken Dryden Teaches Class Of The Future To Five Universities Simultaneously
    Ken Dryden sits in a classroom at McGill University in Montreal ready to talk to students about the future. His face beams into four other classrooms across the country.

    Ken Dryden Teaches Class Of The Future To Five Universities Simultaneously

    Burnaby RCMP Shoot, Kill Man After Responding To Double-stabbing Incident

    Burnaby RCMP Shoot, Kill Man After Responding To Double-stabbing Incident
    Burnaby RCMP say they responded to reports of a double stabbing (on the 6100 block of 14th Avenue) shortly before 6 a.m. Sunday.

    Burnaby RCMP Shoot, Kill Man After Responding To Double-stabbing Incident