Close X
Saturday, October 5, 2024
ADVT 
National

Rating Agency Says Alberta Tax Increases Give More Leeway To Other Provinces

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 02 Jan, 2016 01:43 PM
    WINNIPEG — A bond-rating agency says recent tax increases in Alberta give more leeway to other western provinces to raise their own levies.
     
    Standard and Poor's recently confirmed its AA rating for the Manitoba government. It noted that one of several factors in the decision was the Alberta government's recent tax changes, including a new surtax on higher personal incomes.
     
    "With Alberta changing its corporate and personal income taxation, we believe that tax competition between Alberta and other Canadian provinces, especially those in Western Canada, will decrease, as will constraints on the ability to raise revenues," the agency wrote in a report.
     
    Manitoba's NDP government has already faced public anger over tax hikes, most notably a 2013 decision to raise the provincial sales tax to eight per cent from seven.
     
    Alberta has no provincial sales tax, but the NDP government has revamped its formerly flat 10 per cent income tax rate. It has introduced new surtaxes for high-income earners, starting at $150,000.
     
    Manitoba is musing about new income surtaxes as well, although its existing rates are already above 10 per cent.
     
    Fletcher Baragar, an associate professor of economics at the University of Manitoba, said small differences in corporate or income taxes usually don't mean much in terms of where people choose to live or set up businesses.
     
    But there can be a big public backlash for politicians who raise taxes, he warned.
     
    "I think the constraint has really been a political one — the perception of that. Part of that perception is heightened by the concern that if the tax rate gets too far out of the park, you're going to lose people, you're going to lose business."
     
    With Alberta raising taxes, Baragar said bond rating agencies feel other provinces will have an easier time, politically, raising their own taxes if need be to meet budget targets.
     
    Manitoba Premier Greg Selinger said while his government has raised some taxes, it has lowered others, such as the education property tax for seniors and the small-business income tax rate.
     
    "We're always looking at ways to make sure Manitobans can have an affordable cost of living and that we can grow job opportunities in the province," the premier said in a year-end interview.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Second Degree Murder Charge Laid Against Brampton Man In The Death Of His Mother

    Second Degree Murder Charge Laid Against Brampton Man In The Death Of His Mother
    The 23-year-old suspect was arrested Saturday, a few hours after the body of his mother was discovered in a Brampton home.

    Second Degree Murder Charge Laid Against Brampton Man In The Death Of His Mother

    Advisory Remains: Tests On Saskatchewan City's Water Could Be Completed Tuesday

    Advisory Remains: Tests On Saskatchewan City's Water Could Be Completed Tuesday
    The Saskatchewan city of North Battleford says a precautionary drinking-water advisory remains in effect as officials wait for more test results.

    Advisory Remains: Tests On Saskatchewan City's Water Could Be Completed Tuesday

    Safeway Urges Consumers In Five Provinces To Throw Out Cooked Chicken Wings

    Safeway Urges Consumers In Five Provinces To Throw Out Cooked Chicken Wings
    Safeway is recalling several varieties of store-packaged, cooked chicken wings over concerns they may be contaminated with a toxin-producing bacteria.

    Safeway Urges Consumers In Five Provinces To Throw Out Cooked Chicken Wings

    Former KGB Worker Mikhail Lennikov Voluntarily Leaves Canada After 6 Years Avoiding Deportation

    Former KGB Worker Mikhail Lennikov Voluntarily Leaves Canada After 6 Years Avoiding Deportation
    VANCOUVER — A former KGB agent who spent six years living inside a Vancouver church to avoid deportation has voluntarily left Canada.

    Former KGB Worker Mikhail Lennikov Voluntarily Leaves Canada After 6 Years Avoiding Deportation

    Some B.C. Residents Can Relax As Crews Make Progress Corralling Two Wildfires

    Some B.C. Residents Can Relax As Crews Make Progress Corralling Two Wildfires
     Crews are making good progress on a pair of wildfires burning in the south Okanagan near Oliver, B.C., south of Penticton.

    Some B.C. Residents Can Relax As Crews Make Progress Corralling Two Wildfires

    Canadian Reporter Once Jailed In Egypt Says Anti-Terror Law Enshrines Unjust System

    Canadian Reporter Once Jailed In Egypt Says Anti-Terror Law Enshrines Unjust System
    A Canadian journalist branded as a terrorist by the Egyptian government says new laws passed in the country today make it likely that other reporters will meet the same fate.

    Canadian Reporter Once Jailed In Egypt Says Anti-Terror Law Enshrines Unjust System