Monday, December 22, 2025
ADVT 
National

NDP Unveils Universal Pharmacare Plan, Aims Program Delivery By The End Of 2020

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 01 Apr, 2019 06:15 PM

    COQUITLAM, B.C. — The NDP is promising to bring in a universal and comprehensive national pharmacare program targeted to begin in 2020 if the party wins the next federal election.


    NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh announced details of the pharmacare plan today with health critic Don Davies at an event in Coquitlam, B.C.


    The party says the plan would see every Canadian covered for a list of prescription drugs determined by an arms-length group of experts that it says would be protected from industry and political pressure.


    The party says the plan would save families who don't currently have private drug coverage an average $550 per year and it would save employers about $600 per employee with extended health benefits.


    The legislation would be modeled on the Canada Health Act and provide an annual pharmacare transfer to the provinces and territories, with provinces paying about 60 per cent of the total cost and the federal government providing the remaining 40 per cent.


    Davies, who represents Vancouver Kingsway, says the cost to provinces will be about the same as they are paying now.


    An analysis from the parliamentary budget officer says the total cost of a national pharmacare program would be $23.7 billion in 2020, representing a $4.2 billion savings each year over the current amount being spent on drugs in Canada.


    Last week, Singh said an NDP government would expand the tax on investment profits as part of a package of measures aimed to pay for pharmacare, affordable child care and housing.


    "Those measures would free up billions that would be available for this as well. The rest of financing would be a matter of discussion between the federal government and provinces and territories," Davies said.


    The federal government taxes 50 per cent of profits made on investments, also known as capital gains, but the NDP wants to increase that threshold — known as the inclusion rate — to 75 per cent. It says that would raise about $3 billion in revenue.


    The New Democrats have also talked about closing a stock-option loophole and cracking down on the use of bearer shares and foreign tax havens, which they say help the rich avoid paying their fair share of taxes to society.


    In its budget last month, the Liberal government said Canada's patchwork of drug coverage, which comprises more than 100 public programs and 100,000 private insurance plans, is not well equipped to handle the increasingly expensive drugs now coming to market.


    Drug spending in Canada is expected to surpass $50 billion by 2028, an expert panel has found.


    In the budget, the Liberals promised a new agency to negotiate prescription drug prices for Canadians to try and drive down costs, a move it billed as an "important step" on the path to an eventual national pharmacare plan. It also promised to build a national formulary and promised to spend $500 million a year, starting in 2022, to subsidize drugs that treat rare diseases.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Credit Agency Warns Big Risk To Canadian Schools If China Pulls Students

    Credit Agency Warns Big Risk To Canadian Schools If China Pulls Students
    Tuition for international students is much higher than that charged to Canadians and has become a "crucial" source of income for schools, Moody's says.    

    Credit Agency Warns Big Risk To Canadian Schools If China Pulls Students

    StatCan Says Number Of Cannabis Users Relatively Unchanged Since Legalization

    The national statistics offices says legalizing cannabis doesn't seem to have much changed how many people use the drug.

    StatCan Says Number Of Cannabis Users Relatively Unchanged Since Legalization

    Trudeau Liberals Face Pushback On Indigenous Child Welfare Legislation

    OTTAWA — The Trudeau Liberals have delayed a law meant to help Indigenous children due to concerns from some Indigenous leaders.

    Trudeau Liberals Face Pushback On Indigenous Child Welfare Legislation

    Doctors Getting Smaller Payment Increases, Doctors Per Person Rising: Institute

    Doctors Getting Smaller Payment Increases, Doctors Per Person Rising: Institute
    OTTAWA — The Canadian Institute for Health Information says doctors in Canada are seeing smaller payment increases at the same time that the number of doctors per Canadian is rising.    

    Doctors Getting Smaller Payment Increases, Doctors Per Person Rising: Institute

    Vessel That Spilled Fuel Into English Bay Acquitted Of All Charges

    Vessel That Spilled Fuel Into English Bay Acquitted Of All Charges
    VANCOUVER — A British Columbia provincial court has acquitted a vessel on all charges over its spill of 2,700 litres of bunker fuel into Vancouver's English Bay.

    Vessel That Spilled Fuel Into English Bay Acquitted Of All Charges

    B.C. Court Overturns Murder Conviction, Orders New Trial Based Judge's Answer

    B.C. Court Overturns Murder Conviction, Orders New Trial Based Judge's Answer
    VANCOUVER — British Columbia's top court has overturned a second-degree murder conviction against a man who was found guilty of stabbing a Good Samaritan in downtown Vancouver.

    B.C. Court Overturns Murder Conviction, Orders New Trial Based Judge's Answer