Wednesday, October 1, 2008

Haldimand "Federal Election 2008 Dion's Green Shift plan is too Risky"

Dion's carbon tax not worth the risk
September 30, 2008


Yesterday, the final nail in the carbon tax coffin was hammered in by the Liberals themselves.

Ontario Finance Minister Dwight Duncan, the most senior Liberal Finance Minister in the country, was asked a direct question about carbon taxes.

Duncan could not have been clearer in his response:

"One of the things that I think would be a mistake right now is massive shifts in the tax burden at a time when there's uncertainty."

Duncan joins a growing list of Liberals – federal and provincial, incumbent and non-incumbent – questioning the cornerstone plank in Stephane Dion’s platform.

If Liberals themselves don’t have confidence in Stephane Dion’s plan for Canada, why should Canadians?

Stephane Dion. Not a leader. Not worth the risk.

BACKGROUNDER

Liberals in Ontario are warning that a carbon tax will be bad for the economy. They can all see a new tax is not the way to deal with global economic uncertainty. Why can’t Mr. Dion and the federal Liberals?

The Facts:

Finance Minister Dwight Duncan warned against "massive shifts in tax burden at a time when there's uncertainty", saying it would be a "mistake" (Globe and Mail, September 29, 2008).
Former Ontario Finance Minister Greg Sorbara has warned Stéphane Dion to "qualify his commitment to the Green Shift on the basis that it would only be implemented with sound evidence that it would not have negative impact on the economy" (National Post, September 20, 2008).

Liberal Premier Dalton McGuinty has refused to endorse Stéphane Dion’s platform and has said that a carbon tax is not the best way to combat climate change (Canadian Press, September 8, 2008; Toronto Star, May 28, 2008).

Ontario Liberals are clear. This is no time to introduce a risky new carbon tax.
http://www.dianefinley.ca/EN/417/17618

This article is from the Canadian Taxpayers Federation, this is a Must Read!

Fiscal Discipline and Liberal DNA

In an election campaign where our economic future is increasingly shaping up to be the ballot question, it is not only important, but indeed a responsibility, that each party cost their platform.

To their credit, the Liberals did just that recently by releasing Richer, Fairer, Greener: An Action Plan for the 21st Century. Let's consider what the Grits have offered.The plan's whole layout is rather unorthodox. Rather than present year-by-year numbers as per government budgets and annual public accounts, the Liberal platform offers an accumulated four-year projection of how a majority Liberal government would introduce new taxes, cut existing taxes, and spend billions on a wide array of people, projects, and programs all the while balancing the books.

Over four years a Liberal government would collect $1.07-trillion in taxes and spend $1.05-trillion, leaving a surplus of slightly less than $20-billion. But the entire plan hinges on one big assumption. Their projections assume annual revenue growth of 4.5 per cent for each of the next four years. That's higher than what the department of finance presently projects and likely doesn't take into account the adverse impact of events south of the 49th.

Consider, for example, the impact if their growth projections are off by a single percentage point. A still optimistic 3.5 percent annual growth in revenues creates a shortfall of $60-billion. Subtract their platform's allowance of a $20-billion "cushion" and suddenly there's a $40-billion hole in the Liberal plan.

Would a Stéphane Dion government post $10-billion annual deficits to fund their ambitious spending agenda under this scenario?Dion says no.

He has committed repeatedly during the campaign to run balanced budgets.Would a Stéphane Dion government raise taxes to the tune of $10-billion per year to fund any shortfalls in his ambitious spending agenda?Again, Dion says no. But on this front it should be noted that Mr. Dion has also repeatedly claimed that his Party's central plank in this campaign - the Green Shift - would not impose new burdens on taxpayers. Clearly this is false.

The Liberal's Green Shift introduces a $15-billion annual carbon tax on traditional energy sources. That would be offset, in part, by lower personal and business income taxes to the tune of $9.5-billion. However, the remainder is new spending with $4.5-billion going to low income families and $1-billion toward research and development. In other words, for every $3 in new taxes only $2 will be coming back in relief. The other $1 is new spending.

There is, of course, one final option for Mr. Dion should his plan meet a shortfall: cut spending.

On this point Mr. Dion says "fiscal discipline is now part of the Liberal DNA," harkening back to 1997-98 when former Liberal Prime Minister Jean Chrétien balanced the books for the first time in nearly thirty years.How did they do it? They cut spending. Between 1993 and 1996, program spending decreased by nearly 10 percent. Cuts were made across the board. And it was explained to Canadians as tough but necessary medicine to nurse the country back to fiscal health after decades of Liberal and Conservative recklessness.

Is this something Mr. Dion would do to keep the country's books balanced?

Consider the platform - without questioning any of its revenue assumptions - says it will reallocate $12-billion in current spending and find a further $5-billion in proverbial "efficiency" savings" as part of their plan to balance the budget. Yet, not a single penny under this category of "expenditure discipline" is detailed.

If Mr. Dion can't detail committed-to spending restraint in an arguably rosy platform document, what confidence is there they could do it in the event of a not-so-unlikely economic downturn?

The Liberals have not put out a taxpayer-friendly platform; but it is a platform nonetheless and they've had the courage to release a document for voters and taxpayers to consider. Now it's time for the Conservatives to step up to the plate.
http://www.taxpayer.com/main/news.php?news_id=2974

1 comment:

  1. Donna I have been a Liberal voter all my life. Dion has taken the Liberals to the brick of destruction. This greenshift plan is very dangerous and I hope that for all the Liberals out there they head the warnings. We cannot afford to allow Dion to be in any kind of power.

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