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Re-elected Liberals would still run big deficits, despite new taxes

OTTAWA — Justin Trudeau tried to make virtue out of red ink Sunday as he released a Liberal platform that promises to impose new taxes on wealthy individuals, large international corporations, foreign housing speculators and tech giants to help cover the cost of billions in new spending and tax breaks for the middle class.
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OTTAWA — Justin Trudeau tried to make virtue out of red ink Sunday as he released a Liberal platform that promises to impose new taxes on wealthy individuals, large international corporations, foreign housing speculators and tech giants to help cover the cost of billions in new spending and tax breaks for the middle class.

Even with the new taxes, the platform projects another four years of deficits if the Liberals are re-elected on Oct. 21 — $27.4 billion next year, falling to $21 billion by the fourth year of the mandate.

“We are making a different choice than Conservatives do,” Trudeau told a news conference before an audience of students at the University of Toronto’s Mississauga campus.

“We’re choosing to invest in middle-class Canadians, invest in people’s communities because, quite frankly, that is what has worked over the past four years. Responsible investments have led to the creation of over a million new jobs, most of them full time, and lifting 900,000 people, including 300,000 kids, out of poverty.

“Conservatives are still making the argument that the way to grow the economy is through cuts and austerity and tax breaks that go to the wealthiest. We disagree.”

The Conservatives were taking a break from the campaign trail Sunday. In B.C., NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh spent a sixth straight day stumping for west-coast votes, promising a $100-million fund to help keep young people out of gangs and mitigate the growing problem of organized crime.

And in Vancouver, Green party Leader Elizabeth May said her party would introduce a “robot tax” if elected — a levy to be paid by a company every time it replaces a worker with a machine, part of a strategy to ease the impact of the growth of artificial intelligence.

But Sunday was mostly about the Liberal platform, which Trudeau described as a “fiscally responsible” plan under which the Canada’s debt-to-GDP ratio — already the best among G7 countries — would decrease every year of a second mandate. As well, he said Canada will retain its Triple A credit rating, which only one other G7 country, Germany, enjoys.

According to the platform, the proposed new taxes, combined with revenue from the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion project, would fatten federal coffers by $5.2 billion in the first year, rising to $7.2 billion in the fourth year.

But the extra monies would be eclipsed by 48 new spending and tax break initiatives for the middle class, which the platform estimates would cost $9.3 billion next year, rising to nearly $17 billion by the fourth year of a second mandate. The platform does not, however, include costing for several promises, including the promise to introduce a national pharmacare program which Trudeau said will have to be negotiated with the provinces.

An advisory panel created by Trudeau and led by former Ontario health minister Eric Hoskins has pegged the cost of phasing in pharmacare over 10 years at $3.5 billion in 2022, rising to $15.3 billion annually by 2027. The Liberals are promising an extra $6 billion over four years to the provinces for health care priorities, including what Trudeau has called “a down payment” on an eventual pharmacare plan.

Nor does the platform include the cost of a promise to create a guaranteed family leave benefit for new parents who don’t qualify for paid leave through Employment Insurance during the first year of their child’s life.

In 2015, the Liberals won election promising to run up modest deficits of no more than $10 billion for several years before returning to balance by the end of the mandate. Instead, they ran up much larger-than-anticipated deficits and have now abandoned any pretence of balancing the budget in the short term. The platform, like the Liberal government’s budgets before it, proposes no target date for staunching the flow of red ink.

The platform does promise that a re-elected Liberal government would impose an additional 10 per cent excise tax on luxury cars, boats and personal aircraft with price tags of more than $100,000.

Tech giants like Google, Amazon and Facebook with global revenues of at least $1 billion a year and Canadian annual revenues of at least $40 million would face a three per cent tax on revenue generated by the sale of online advertising and users’ personal data.

And non-resident foreigners who own vacant property in cities like Vancouver and Toronto, where speculation is a concern, would face a ”consistent national tax.”

The Liberals would also crack down on tax loopholes that they say allow large corporations to excessively deduct debt to artificially reduce the amount of taxes they pay. And they would conduct a comprehensive review of government spending and tax expenditures, with a focus on tax measures that disproportionately benefit the wealthiest individuals and large corporations — a measure the platform estimates would bring in $2 billion in the first year, rising to $3 billion by the fourth year.

On the flip side, the Liberals would offer a host of tax breaks for middle-class Canadians, including raising the basic personal tax exemption to $15,000 for individuals earning less than $147,000.

Trudeau has previously announced most of the big ticket items in the platform. But it does contain some new promises, including an emphasis on making post secondary education more affordable.

A re-elected Liberal government would increase Canada Student Grants by 40 per cent, boosting the maximum grant available to $4,200. It would also give students two years after graduating before they need to begin paying off student loans and, even after that interest-free grace period, wouldn’t require them to begin repaying until they’re earning at least $35,000.

As well, new parents would be entitled to an interest-free pause in their loan repayments until their youngest child turns five.

The Liberals are also promising to:

— Create a new federal Family Day holiday;

— Hike the federal minimum wage to $15;

— Extend employment insurance sickness benefits to 26 weeks from 15 weeks;

— Create a “career insurance benefit” to kick in after EI benefits run out for long-time employees of a business that shuts down;

— Create a “director of terrorism prosecutions” to ensure Canadians who travel abroad to join terrorist organizations or plot terrorist activities at home are brought to justice.