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1.
Commentary - CD Howe Institute ; - (638):0_1,0_2,1-21, 2023.
Artigo em Inglês | ProQuest Central | ID: covidwho-2278489

RESUMO

The combination of growth-enhancing and fiscally prudent policies will redress the damage COVID has done to federal fiscal capacity, and provide more resources Canadians will need to address an ageing population, climate change and the energy transition, subsequent pandemics, and challenges we do not yet foresee. The Main Estimates for the 2023/24 fiscal year will follow Public Sector Accounting Standards, and will appear before the start of the fiscal year, after appropriate vetting by the Treasury Board. Notwithstanding the federal government's rhetorical emphasis on global warming as an existential threat that requires costly curtailments of fossil fuel production and consumption, the purported economic costs of warming do not figure in its projections, nor do the fiscal costs of adapting and fixing the damage. The response to global warming is likely to be a drag on economic growth (Canadian Climate Institute 2022).

2.
Commentary - C.D. Howe Institute ; - (567):0_1,0_2,1-22, 2020.
Artigo em Inglês | ProQuest Central | ID: covidwho-962533

RESUMO

Highlights of the 2020 Shadow Budget's measures to support economic growth are changes to personal and corporate income taxes that will encourage talent and investment, elimination of distorting taxes and border frictions, more focused infrastructure investments, and measures to support Canada's labour market. The Shadow Budget would foster opportunity and well-being by supporting saving for, and income in, retirement, establishing more generous treatment for medical expenses, supporting charitable giving, and implementing a more growth-friendly strategy to reduce greenhouse gas emissions with a new GST rate on motive fuels. The government spent the bulk of this bonus, so the deficit came in almost as projected. Since 2015/16, actual expenses have exceeded budget expectations by a cumulative $13.2 billion - Ottawa's sticking to its budgets would have almost wiped out last year's deficit.1 Voting ourselves benefits, and passing forward the part of the bill we are not willing to pay ourselves, is neither fair nor economically sensible. Parallel with the promise to give Canadians confidence in the federal government's fiscal framework and the longer-term prospects for Canada's economy is a commitment to greater transparency and accountability in the budgeting process.

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