1992 Canadian federal budget explained

Budget of the Canadian Federal Government
Year:1992
Country:Canada
Previous Budget:1991 Canadian federal budget
Previous Year:1991
Next Budget:1993 Canadian federal budget
Next Year:1993
Presented:25 February 1992
Parliament:34th
Party:Progressive Conservative
Minister:Don Mazankowski
Total Revenue:124.486 billion
Total Expenditures:163.505 billion
Deficit:$39.019 billion[1]

The 1992 Canadian budget was a Canadian federal budget for the Government of Canada presented by Minister of Finance Don Mazankowski in the House of Commons of Canada on 25 February 1992. It was the fourth budget after the 1988 Canadian federal election. It is the first budget presented by Don Mazankowski.

Background

The budget is presented amid poor economic conditions and soaring federal deficit.

Taxes

The 1992 budget introduced significant changes to both personal and corporate income tax systems.

Personal income taxes

Corporate income taxes

The budget reduces taxes imposed on corporations by $2 billions over the 1992-1993 to 1996-1997 period. The budget specifically provides relief to the manufacturing and processing industries that have been seriously affected by the recession.[6]

Other taxes

Expenditures

Expenditure Control Plan

The Expenditure Control Plan announced in the 1990 budget and extended in 1991 is continued and broadened in the 1992 budget.

Cuts

Spending limitations

Reactions

The budget garnered mixed reaction from columnist Jean-Paul Gagné from Les Affaires who pointed out that the budget was unextraordinary but contained some interesting measures (reduction in the income surtax, no increase in the GST rate, Home Buyers' Plan).[8]

Opposition

The Liberal leader of the Official Opposition in Ottawa Jean Chrétien, and the NDP leader Audrey McLaughlin, criticized the budget for its lack of measures to fight unemployment. The Bloc Québécois leader Lucien Bouchard pointed out the budget was a proof that the federal government was at the end of its rope.[9]

Business community and labour unions

The budget was well received by the business community and especially real-estate and construction actors.[10] The value of the Canadian dollar increased by 0.39 cents with respect to the United States dollar in the foreign exchange market the day after the budget speech. The TSX 300 index gained 35.52 points while the Montreal Stock Exchange index gained 19.39 points.[11]

Quebec's labour unions (CSN, CEQ and FTQ) were disappointed by the budget pointing out the lack of measures to fight unemployment and poverty and the lack of new infrastructure projects. The unions also criticized the abolition of the Economic Council of Canada.

Provinces

Quebec's finance minister, Gérard D. Levesque, received the budget favourably talking about a step in the right direction in that it did not reduce transfers to provinces.[12]

The PQ, the Official Opposition in Quebec, on the other hand decried the budget as cosmetic and not going far enough to fight unemployment although some tax relief measures (and especially the reduction in the personal surtax) were applauded.[12]

Ontario's NDP Finance minister Floyd Laughren also criticized the lack of measures to fight unemployment.[9]

Legislative history

The Child Tax Benefit was scheduled to enter into force on 1 January 1993 and was included in a separate bill which received royal assent on 15 October 1992. Dissolution of some abolished crown corporation and other public bodies was included in bill C-63 which received royal assent on 15 February 1993.

Some minor changes announced in the budget (notably amendments to the Canada Student Loans Act and pay cuts for the Prime Minister and federal ministers) were included in the Budget Implementation (fiscal measures) Act, 1992 which received royal assent more than a year after the budget speech, on 2 April 1993.

Most significant tax measures of the budget were included in bill C-24 which received royal assent on 10 June 1993.

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. Effective surtax rate is 4.5% for fiscal year 1992.
  3. The measure was initially limited to proceeds received before 2 March 1993 for housing bought before 1 October 1993 ; subsequent budgets will expand the measure indefinitely which rendered both deadlines ineffective.
  4. Maximum deduction reaches $5,000 per child under 7 (or eligible to the Disability Tax Credit) and $3,000 in any other case.
  5. Income Tax Budget Amendments Act, 1996. S.C.. 1997. 25. 37(7). https://www.parl.ca/Content/Bills/352/Government/C-92/C-92_4/C-92_4.pdf#page=68.
  6. News: Jannard . Maurice . La fiscalité des entreprises est réduite de deux milliards . La Presse . 26 February 1992 . Montréal . A4 . fr.
  7. Achieved through a phased-in increase to the manufacturing and processing profit deduction listed in s 125.1 of the Income Tax Act.
  8. News: Gagné . Jean-Paul . Le premier budget de Maz le magicien . 7 March 1992 . 6 . fr.
  9. News: The Canadian Press . Rien pour contrer le chômage: la récession va durer longtemps, disent les chefs de parti. 26 February 1992. La Presse. B1.
  10. News: Gilbert . Mario . Dansereau . Suzanne . Le milieu des affaires est satisfait du budget, les syndicats ne le sont pas . 19 June 2020 . La Presse . Montréal . B1 . fr.
  11. News: Beauregard . Valérie . Le budget dope le dollar. 19 June 2020 . La Presse . 27 February 1992 . Montréal . D1. fr.
  12. News: Lessard . Denis . Québec accueille favorablement le budget, le PQ le juge « cosmétique » . 19 June 2020 . La Presse . 26 February 1992 . Montréal . A3 . fr.