Thursday, December 18, 2025
ADVT 
National

Income Splitting To Drain Workers From Labour Force: Budget Watchdog

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 17 Mar, 2015 03:06 PM
    OTTAWA — Canada's parliamentary budget office believes the Harper government's controversial income-splitting tax plan will encourage workers to leave the labour force.
     
    In a new report released today, the federal budget watchdog estimates the so-called "Family Tax Cut" will reduce the workforce by the equivalent of 7,000 net full-time jobs as the lower earning partner in some families opts to stop working.
     
    The Conservative government's multibillion-dollar tax measure was introduced at a time when the country is trying to attract lower-wage workers into the labour force.
     
    The measure was announced last fall and allows eligible taxpayers to transfer up to $50,000 of income to his or her spouse in a lower tax bracket in order to collect a non-refundable tax credit of up to $2,000 per year.
     
    The report also says the measure primarily benefits middle- through higher-income households — while earners in the bottom 20 per cent have "near zero" eligibility for the tax credit.
     
    On the other hand, it says about 27 per cent of households in the 80th income percentile are projected to be eligible for income splitting.
     
    The office also says income splitting will cost about $2.2 billion in 2015-16 — higher than the government's projection of $1.935 billion.
     
    It also agrees with other studies of the income-splitting measure in saying only 15 per cent — or two million households — will be eligible to benefit from the plan.
     
    The income-splitting proposal was a key pledge in the Conservatives' 2011 election platform.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Mountie Who Fired Taser Lied At Inquiry Into Dziekanski's Death: B.C. Judge

    VANCOUVER — The RCMP officer who stunned Robert Dziekanski with a Taser at Vancouver's airport lied at a public inquiry, a judge ruled Friday, marking the first guilty verdict of any kind related to the Polish immigrant's death.

    Mountie Who Fired Taser Lied At Inquiry Into Dziekanski's Death: B.C. Judge

    Vancouver Aquarium Beluga On 'breeding Loan' To Florida Seaworld Dies

    Orlando SeaWorld posted a statement on its Facebook page Friday confirming the death of Nanuq, a male beluga estimated to be around 31 or 32 years old.

    Vancouver Aquarium Beluga On 'breeding Loan' To Florida Seaworld Dies

    B.C. Ballot Blunder To Cost Thousands Of Dollars: Teachers' Union

    B.C. Ballot Blunder To Cost Thousands Of Dollars: Teachers' Union
    VANCOUVER — The union representing British Columbia teachers says the profession's regulatory branch has bungled an election by mailing out voting packages without ballots.

    B.C. Ballot Blunder To Cost Thousands Of Dollars: Teachers' Union

    Winnipeg Mom Found Not Guilty To Abandonment For Leaving Child, 6, Alone

    Winnipeg Mom Found Not Guilty To Abandonment For Leaving Child, 6, Alone
    WINNIPEG — A Winnipeg mom has been found not guilty of child abandonment after leaving her six-year-old son home alone for 90 minutes.

    Winnipeg Mom Found Not Guilty To Abandonment For Leaving Child, 6, Alone

    Kamloops Man Fights In Court For Return Of His 10 Medicinal Marijuana Plants

    Kamloops Man Fights In Court For Return Of His 10 Medicinal Marijuana Plants
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. — A Kamloops man who is seeking the return of 10 medicinal marijuana plants seized by police last summer will have to wait another month to find out if he will be reunited with his buds.

    Kamloops Man Fights In Court For Return Of His 10 Medicinal Marijuana Plants

    Childproofing Expert Offers Tips For Safety In Light Of Toronto Boy's Death

    Childproofing Expert Offers Tips For Safety In Light Of Toronto Boy's Death
    TORONTO — An expert in childproofing says the freezing death of a Toronto boy highlights the unpredictability of children and the need for caregivers  to be prepared for different developmental milestones. 

    Childproofing Expert Offers Tips For Safety In Light Of Toronto Boy's Death