Thursday, January 1, 2026
ADVT 
National

How Much Surplus Will Be Left After Stephen Harper's Sweeping Tax Cuts?

Darpan News Desk Darpan, 30 Oct, 2014 03:33 PM
    OTTAWA - Prime Minister Stephen Harper's sweeping new package of family tax cuts will chew through billions of dollars of the government's projected budgetary surplus.
     
    But it remains to be seen just how much cash will be left over — if any — once Ottawa introduces its tax-relief package for families.
     
    Harper says he still anticipates running a small deficit this year and a small surplus next year, despite the "significant" cost of the tax-cutting measures announced today.
     
    TD senior economist Randall Bartlett says even though the tax relief will be expensive, he believes there will be enough surplus room in the federal piggy bank to pay for it — but it will be close this year.
     
    Bartlett says TD's projection of a $5-billion surplus for this year will essentially be wiped out — especially when the risk of persistently low oil prices is factored in.
     
    The Finance Department estimates the combined tax cuts announced today will reduce Ottawa's bank account by an average of $4.4 billion annually over six years — for a total of just under $27 billion.
     
    The missing piece of the puzzle of how much Ottawa expects its projections to change as a result of the cuts will have to wait for the government's upcoming fall economic update.
     
    Health spending up only $61 per person in 2014
    Thu, 30 Oct 2014 21:11:11 GMT
     
    TORONTO - The cost of health care in Canada will go up this year, but the increase is expected to be the smallest in the past 17 years, a new report suggests.
     
    The report on health-care spending in Canada estimates that total health expenditures will rise by only 2.1 per cent, or $61 more per person compared to last year's health costs.
     
    Spending on drugs has flattened out. And concerns about the cost of a greying population on the health system aren't currently driving costs up in a significant way, according to the report from the Canadian Institute for Health Information.
     
    At this point, the institute says, population aging is only increasing costs by just under one per cent per year — 0.9 per cent. The trend is expected to change incrementally over the next two decades, the CIHI report says.
     
    "While concerns regarding demographics are understandable — Canadians over the age of 65 account for less than 15 per cent of the population but consume more than 45 per cent of provinces’ and territories’ health-care dollars — the share of public-sector health dollars spent on Canadian seniors has not changed significantly over the past decade," Brent Diverty, CIHI's vice-president for programs, said in a press release.
     
    The report notes that in 2012, per person spending for seniors ranged broadly, from $6,368 per person for those aged 65 to 69 to $21,054 per person per year for those aged 80 or older.
     
    The low end of that scale isn't far off what the report says Canada will pay per person in general in 2014, $6,045.
     
    Canada is expected to spend just under $215 billion this year on health care, which equates to 11 per cent of the country's gross domestic product.
     
    That spending level puts Canada tied for seventh with Denmark among the countries of the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development, the OECD. Canadian spending trails that of the United States, the Netherlands, France, Switzerland, Germany and Austria.
     
    The public purse picks up about 70 per cent of the cost of health care in Canada. The remaining 30 per cent comes from out-of-pocket payments by individuals and private health insurance. That 70-30 cost breakdown has been relatively constant over the past 20 years, the report says.
     
    Hospitals make up about 30 per cent of health-care spending, $63.5 billion. Drugs and doctors come next, at 16 and 15 per cent respectively, or $33.9 billion and $33.3 billion.
     
    Drug costs, once a major driver of expenditure increases, have stabilized, growing by only 0.8 per cent in 2014, the report says.
     
    "Drug expenditures are slowing down," Diverty says. "With generic pricing control policies for the pharmaceutical industry, the expiration of patents on prevalent medications and fewer new drugs entering the market, we are seeing what amounts to flattened growth."
     
    The three territories, which often have to fly residents south for medical care, spend substantially more per person than provinces do. Nunavut will spend the most, at just over $13,160 a person, while Quebec is expected to spend the least, at $5,61

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Political contemporaries demand resignation from Rob Ford

    Political contemporaries demand resignation from Rob Ford
    Political contemporaries and council colleagues are demanding a resignation from Toronto Mayor Rob Ford after Wednesday’s episode in which the media uncovered another video of him smoking crack cocaine.

    Political contemporaries demand resignation from Rob Ford

    Microsoft's new centre to generate 400 jobs in Vancouver

    Microsoft's new centre to generate 400 jobs in Vancouver
    Microsoft has announced plans to open a new training and development centre in Vancouver that will more than double its workforce thus creating 400 new jobs. The announcement that came in Thursday translates into posing Vancouver home to Microsoft's largest centre in Canada.

    Microsoft's new centre to generate 400 jobs in Vancouver

    Calgary Police seize $1M worth of drugs and an AK-47

    Calgary Police seize $1M worth of drugs and an AK-47
    Nearly $1M worth of drugs and an AK-47 have been seized by the Calgary police and RCMP in a bust conducted earlier this week.

    Calgary Police seize $1M worth of drugs and an AK-47

    BC opens doors to Asian investment in LNG

    BC opens doors to Asian investment in LNG
    Premier Christy Clark announced Wednesday that she will lead her fifth international trade mission. Along with Minister of Natural Gas Development Rich Coleman and industry delegates, the Premier will travel to Malaysia, Singapore, and Hong Kong to promote the development of British Columbia’s liquefied natural gas (LNG) industry from May 2 to May 9.

    BC opens doors to Asian investment in LNG

    Body of Canadian journalist found in Cambodia forest

    Body of Canadian journalist found in Cambodia forest
    Cambodian police Thursday discovered the body of 58-year-old Canadian journalist and author Dave Walker who has been missing since Feb 14 in Siem Reap city, national police spokesman Kirt Chantharith confirmed.

    Body of Canadian journalist found in Cambodia forest

    Afghans on the road to self reliance after Canadian mission’s departure

    Afghans on the road to self reliance after Canadian mission’s departure
    Award winning CBC reporter Mellissa Fung shared her experience as a journalist covering the Canadian military mission in Afghanistan at an event that was held April 29th in Vancouver. 

    Afghans on the road to self reliance after Canadian mission’s departure