1985 Canadian federal budget explained

Budget of the Canadian Federal Government
Year:1985
Country:Canada
Previous Budget:1984 Canadian federal budget
Previous Year:1984
Next Budget:1986 Canadian federal budget
Next Year:1986
Presented:23 May 1985
Parliament:33rd
Party:Progressive Conservative
Minister:Michael Wilson
Total Revenue:77.742 billion
Total Expenditures:111.131 billion
Deficit:$33.389 billion[1]

The 1985 Canadian federal budget for fiscal year 1985–86 was presented by Minister of Finance Michael Wilson in the House of Commons of Canada on 23 May 1985. This is the first federal budget under the premiership of Brian Mulroney, and generally increased taxes.[2]

Background

The budget is the first presented in the 33rd Canadian Parliament, following the 1984 federal election during which the Progressive-Conservatives won a landslide majority. The previous fiscal year (1983–84) saw, at the time, the largest post-war deficit of the federal government at 37.16 billion.[1]

November 1984 Statement

Prior to the 1985 Budget, Michael Wilson delivered an Economic Statement in the House of Commons on 8 November 1984. The Economic Statement announced a $4.2 billion deficit reduction package for 1985-86. The package included for instance:[3]

The Statement also announced amendments to the Foreign Investment Review Act to facilitate foreign investments into Canada, and tabled documents to implement tax announcements made in prior budgets that had not yet been implemented through legislation. Notably the 1% rate increase in the federal sales tax on 1 October 1984 is confirmed.[3]

The Statement announced that the personal exemptions were to be indexed by 4.6% for 1985.[4]

Despite the measures announced, the deficit for 1985-86 was estimated at $34.9 billion, versus the estimate of the February 1984 budget of a $27.9 billion deficit for the same period.

Taxes

Personal income taxes

The budget brought significant changes to income taxes, notably:

Several revenue increase measures were also announced:

Corporate income taxes

A temporary 5% surtax on large corporations was announced, effective between 1 July 1985 and 30 June 1986. The surtax does not apply to income eligible to the small business deduction.

Capital tax

A temporary 1% surtax on the capital tax payable by large financial institutions effective between 1 January 1986 and 31 December 1987. The surtax is calculated as 1% of capital in excess of $200 million. The surtax was deductible for corporate income taxes

Other taxes

Federal Sales Tax

The Federal Sales Tax rates are increased on 1 January 1986:

The previous 1% temporary increase, slated to end on 31 December 1988, is permanently extended.

The federal sales tax exemption is repealed for the following goods:

Excise taxes

Various excise taxes were increased in the budget:

Energy taxes: Western Accord implementation

The budget follows the signature of the Western Accord between the federal government and the governments of Alberta, British Columbia and Saskatchewan that was slated to enter into force on 1 June 1985. The budget introduced measures to implement the Accord, notably:

Expenditures

The newly-elected government had already established a Ministerial Task Force on Program Review headed by Deputy Prime Minister Erik Nielsen in September 1984. In the November 1984 Economic Statement the Minister of Finance had announced $4.2 billion of expenditure cuts for fiscal year 1985-86 through various measures:

Transfer Programs

Partial indexation of Transfers to Individuals

The major initiative of the budget on the expenditure side was the partial deindexation of most major transfer programs beginning 1 January 1986:

Most major programs (notably Old Age Security and Family Allowances) were subjected to the new partial indexation rule whereas the Guaranteed Income Supplement and veterans' benefits remained fully indexed to CPI.

Cuts to Transfers to Provinces

The government announced a cap to the growth of the Established Programs Financing fiscal arrangements until FY1990-91, saving the federal government $2 billion over the period.

Reactions

The budget garnered generally mixed reaction.

Editorials

On 24 May 1985, several newspapers' main headline focused on the tax increases:

Columnist Alain Dubuc of La Presse pointed out that the budget was disappointing in that it did not drastically reduce the federal deficit while containing few measures for job creation and several tax increases.[7] Most French-language columnists pointed out the uncertainty over the success of the measures announced in the budget.[8]

Jeffrey Simpson of The Globe and Mail painted a nuanced picture of the budget pointing overall that the return to “fiscal sanity” was long overdue.[9] L. Ian MacDonald of The Gazette expressed that the budget was a risky gamble, increasing taxes on the middle class and providing tax incentives to businesses could provide politically explosive should the recovery not materialize.[10]

Opposition

The Opposition Parties strongly rejected the budget:[11]

Unions

Union response was favorable to fiercely negative:[14]

Provinces

Quebec Finance Minister Yves Duhaime pointed the budget embraced "tragic realism", applauded the incentives for job creations provided to SMEs but criticized the cuts to the transfers to provinces.[15]

The National Assembly of Quebec passed a unanimous motion criticizing the deindexation of Old Age Security.[16]

The budget garnered a very positive reaction from former Quebec finance minister Jacques Parizeau. He applauded the courage of the deindexation and the repeal of the RHOSP as a way to inject $2 billion into the economy.[17]

Aftermath

June 27 Ministerial Statement

On June 27, following weeks of protests by elderly Canadians, the Minister of Finance rose in the House of Commons to announce he would reinstate the full indexation of the Old Age Security program:[18]

To compensate the additional costs incurred by the full indexation, he announced that:[18]

Legislative history

The budget was implemented through multiple bills over the years following the budget:

Execution

Budgetary items in billions of dollars
Element1984-19851985-1986
Actual[22] BudgetActual
Tax revenues65.4971.61
Non-tax revenues5.405.22
Program expenditures(86.76)(85.79)
Public debt charge(22.46)(25.44)
Deficit(38.32)(34.40)
Non-budgetary transactions8.524.13
Financial requirements(29.80)(30.27)

Notes and References

References

Budget documents

Enacted legislations

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Canada's deficits and surpluses, 1963-2014. CBC News. CBC/Radio-Canada. 25 April 2015.
  2. Web site: 24 May 1985 . The Leader-Post. live. https://web.archive.org/web/20200626020915/https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=w9EjUEod0xMC&dat=19850524&printsec=frontpage&hl=fr . 2020-06-26 . 2020-06-17. news.google.com.
  3. Book: Wilson . Michael H. . Economic and Fiscal Statement . 8 November 1984 . Government of Canada . Ottawa . 17 . 22 September 2024.
  4. Book: Wilson . Michael H. . Economic and Fiscal Statement – Supplementary Informations . 8 November 1984 . Government of Canada . Ottawa . 131. 22 September 2024.
  5. News: Fellows . Patrick . Savings bonds are always cashable . Toronto Star . 8 July 1986 . E4 . en.
  6. Oil Export Tax Act. S.C.. 1973-74. 53. https://archive.org/details/actsofparl197374v01cana/page/811/mode/1up.
  7. News: Dubuc. Alain . Le ministre des Finances coupe et frappe . 24 May 1985 . A1-A2 . fr.
  8. News: Yorston . John . Wilson budget remains a big question mark . The Gazette . 31 May 1985 . Montreal . B3.
  9. News: Simpson . Jeffrey . Toward fiscal sanity . The Globe and Mail . 24 May 1985 . A6.
  10. News: MacDonald . L. Ian . Tory budget is enormous gamble . The Gazette . 24 May 1985 . Montreal . B3.
  11. News: fr. Auger. Michel C.. Un "budget de promesses brisées", selon Turner . 21 September 2024 . Le Devoir. 1985-05-24. A1.
  12. Book: Canada, Parliament . House of Commons Debates . 33rd Parliement, 1st Session . 1985-05-23 . Supply and Services Canada . Ottawa . 5022 .
  13. Book: Canada, Parliament . House of Commons Debates . 33rd Parliement, 1st Session . 1985-05-23 . Supply and Services Canada . Ottawa . 5028.
  14. News: fr. Cloutier. Laurier. On louange un "budget du tonnerre" ou on y voit un exercice contradictoire, voire injuste . 21 September 2024 . La Presse . 1985-06-13. A8.
  15. News: fr. Thellier. Marie-Agnès. Pour Duhaime, le budget Wilson fait preuve d'un "réalisme tragique" . 21 September 2024 . Le Devoir . 1985-05-25. A5.
  16. News: fr. Labelge . Yvon . Réprobation unanime de l'Assemblée nationale . 21 September 2024 . La Presse . 1985-06-13. A5.
  17. News: Toomey. Craig. Parizeau backs Wilson on budget says Canada can't afford indexing . The Gazette . 19 June 1985 . Montreal . G1.
  18. Book: Canada, Parliament . House of Commons Debates . 33rd Parliament, 1st Session . 1985-06-27 . Supply and Services Canada . Ottawa . 6271.
  19. Book: Canada, Parliament . House of Commons Debates. VII, 1986 . 33rd Parliament, 1st Session . 1986-01-21 . Supply and Services Canada . Ottawa . 10019.
  20. Book: Canada, Parliament . House of Commons Debates. X, 1986 . 33rd Parliament, 1st Session . 1986-06-19 . Supply and Services Canada . Ottawa . 14754.
  21. https://archive.org/details/actsofparl1986v02cana/page/1119/mode/1up An Act to amend the Federal-Provincial Fiscal Arrangements and Federal Post-Secondary Education and Health Contributions Act, 1977
  22. Book: Receiver General of Canada . Public accounts of Canada . 20 October 1986. I : Summary Report and Financial Statements. Supply and Services Canada . Ottawa . 0-660-12525-0 . 2 November 2024.