Close X
Saturday, November 30, 2024
ADVT 
National

PM Stephen Harper Announces 'Family Tax Cut', Child Care Benefit Boost

Darpan News Desk Darpan, 30 Oct, 2014 02:17 PM
    OTTAWA - Prime Minister Stephen Harper is pressing ahead with income splitting for families with kids under 18 — a multibillion-dollar Conservative election promise from 2011 that critics have said would benefit too few Canadians.
     
    To address that complaint, the Conservative government is also boosting the universal child care benefit — $160 a month for kids under six, up from $100, plus a new monthly benefit of $60 for children aged six through 17, effective in 2015.
     
    The so-called "Family Tax Cut" will allow an eligible taxpayer to transfer up to $50,000 of income to his or her spouse for tax purposes in order to collect a non-refundable tax credit of up to $2,000 per year.
     
    The two measures together will cost $3.1 billion in 2014-15 and $4.5 billion in 2015-16.
     
    "Our goal has always been to make sure that Canada is the best country in the world in which to raise a family," Harper told a campaign-style event in Vaughan, Ont.
     
    "Our government is utterly convinced of one thing: when it comes to the cost of raising a family, Canada's moms and dads deserve all of the help that we can give them."
     
    The government is also adding $1,000 to the various limits on the child care expense deduction, which allows taxpayers to claim child care expenses incurred in order to work or go to school.
     
    That measure carries an estimated cost of $15 million in 2014-15 and $65 million in 2015-16.
     
    Harper repeatedly hammered home the message that the entire suite of measures —he described it as an expanded version of the government's original income-splitting promise — would benefit all Canadian families with children.
     
    And he acknowledged the whopping price tag, which he said the government would well be able to afford.
     
    "The measures we announced today, while very significant in terms of cost, are completely affordable within the current budget projection, still allowing us to balance the budget next year, and do all the other things we do as a government," he said.
     
     
    "At the same time, we're doing this in a way that ensures that the things we promised in the last election will actually reach people in the life of this Parliament."
     
    There's a very significant reason why that particular timing is such a priority for the government: were the government to wait, families would not feel the tax help until after the next federal election, slated for October 2015.
     
    To be sure, Thursday's event had all the trappings of a campaign event, complete with two 'average' Canadian families on the stage, both of whom briefly exchanged awkward small talk with the prime minister about the daily challenges of raising a family.
     
    "We know Canadians work hard for their money; we know they work hard raising their families too," Harper said.
     
    "Under the plan we have announced today, every single Canadian family with children will benefit. Everyone will have more money in their pockets."
     
    The Conservatives made the income-splitting promise during the 2011 election campaign, but it was contingent on the federal books being balanced.
     
    Harper has said the federal deficit in the past fiscal year would be $5.2 billion, a fraction of the $16.6 billion forecast, but insisted there won't be a surplus until next year.
     
    Earlier this month, the Conservatives doubled the children's fitness tax credit starting this year — another 2011 commitment that was contingent on the federal books being balanced.
     
    A promise to double the maximum annual contribution limit on tax-free savings accounts to $10,000, the last of the three major surplus-contingent 2011 promises, has yet to be implemented.
     
    Harper hinted Thursday that the tax-free savings expansion would be contained in the next federal budget in the spring.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Four Arrested After Five People Shot In Toronto: Police

    Four Arrested After Five People Shot In Toronto: Police
    TORONTO — Four people have been arrested in a shooting in northwest Toronto that sent five people to hospital, one with life-threatening injuries, police said Thursday.

    Four Arrested After Five People Shot In Toronto: Police

    B.C. Family Haunted By Caitlin Murray's Disappearance More Than A Year Ago

    B.C. Family Haunted By Caitlin Murray's Disappearance More Than A Year Ago
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. — The mystery of what happened to a 21-year-old B.C. woman continues to haunt her family more than a year after she disappeared.

    B.C. Family Haunted By Caitlin Murray's Disappearance More Than A Year Ago

    Stickboy Opera Opens In Vancouver To Take On Bullying Based On Poet's Life

    Stickboy Opera Opens In Vancouver To Take On Bullying Based On Poet's Life
    The new work about school bullying opened to positive reviews in the city and will run until Nov. 7, with hopes of having the production tour high schools throughout British Columbia.

    Stickboy Opera Opens In Vancouver To Take On Bullying Based On Poet's Life

    Wynne on possible Doug Ford PC leadership bid: 'we are very different'

    Wynne on possible Doug Ford PC leadership bid: 'we are very different'
    BEIJING — While Premier Kathleen Wynne says she doesn't want to get involved in the Progressive Conservative leadership tilt in Ontario, she acknowledges that a Doug Ford victory would present "an exercise in contrast."

    Wynne on possible Doug Ford PC leadership bid: 'we are very different'

    BDSM not abuse but way to spice up sex life in safe, consensual way: adherents

    BDSM not abuse but way to spice up sex life in safe, consensual way: adherents
    TORONTO - Fired CBC radio host Jian Ghomeshi's admission that he engages in rough sex has Canadians hearing a term that many may be unfamiliar with — BDSM, or bondage, dominance, sadism and masochism. So just what does BDSM involve and what draws adherents to this kind of sex?

    BDSM not abuse but way to spice up sex life in safe, consensual way: adherents

    Actor says she is going public with Ghomeshi allegations to help other accusers

    Actor says she is going public with Ghomeshi allegations to help other accusers
    TORONTO - "Trailer Park Boys" actor Lucy DeCoutere says she is going public with allegations of abusive behaviour by Jian Ghomeshi because she wants to help other women who are levelling more serious accusations against the ousted CBC host.

    Actor says she is going public with Ghomeshi allegations to help other accusers

    PrevNext