THE 3-D BUDGET

DEBT, DEFICITS AND DISAPPOINTMENT

Cash-strapped Canadian families, who are losing jobs and struggling to put food on the table, are getting a tax break in the Stephen Harper Conservatives' "Make it or Break It" budget.

But will they ever pay for it.

After a decade of sweet surpluses in Ottawa - which made Canada the envy of the world particularly now in this biggest economic meltdown since the Great Depression - we're heading back into the red "big-time."

By the time all the bailout dust settles, we'll be $85-billion in the hole over the next five years, exploding Canada's net debt to a massive $545 billion. Remember: Today's debt - tomorrow's taxes.

Meanwhile, low-income and middle-class families - many who, on average, work for almost six months of the year just to hand over their paycheque to the taxman - are getting a break.

Lower-income families will save about $30 a year, after Finance Minister Jim Flaherty hikes the basic personal income tax exemption by $220 to $10,330.

Middle-income families will save anywhere from $250 to $500 a year, as Flaherty also raises income thresholds for those in the 22% and 26% tax brackets.  The tax breaks are estimated to cost Ottawa some $1.8 billion this fiscal year.

"It (tax relief) is a step in the right direction," commented tax crusader Kevin Gaudet, federal director of the Canadian Taxpayers Federation. Still, he gave Flaherty's budget a "D" grade.

The failing mark, Gaudet says, stands for "debt, deficits and disappointment." Bottom line is if Flaherty's rosy projections of coming out this mess don't come true, our soaring debtload will climb even higher, meaning a bigger tax burden for future taxpayers.

Some critics argue Flaherty had no choice.  With his back against the wall, some preached spending Canada's way out was his only option, while global economies crumble under a raging credit crunch (Iceland's bankrupt government just failed, people are rioting in the streets in Greece, and 75,000 global jobs were lost in just one day this week). 

And so, just as in song "Hey, Big Spender" - Flaherty, whose budget shoes were steel-toed work boots, doled out money to all, promising to save 190,000 jobs this year, with the lowly taxpayer footing the bill.

The ailing auto industry gets another $2.7 billion in short-term loans. Our banking sector - who've been putting the boots to lowly consumers by hiking credit card and lines of credit rates - gets another $70-billion infusion, while Ottawa increases funding to buy back mortgages from $75 billion to $125 billion.  Flaherty is even giving himself and the Canada Deposit Insurance Corp. new powers. The CDIC, which insures up to $100,000 in deposits per member financial institution, may even become a bank and offer lines of credit.  These new powers also mean Flaherty can get tough with banks who gouge consumers.

There's $7 billion for infrastructure spending, $1.5 billion for retraining programs, and $3 billion for renovators, with consumers who remodel getting a tax credit up to $1,350.

Yet, even though Newfoundland is a new "have" province, while Ontario sinks to "have-not" status to now get $347 million in equalization payments and an $880 million increase in Canada Health Transfer payments - nothing was done to make EI (Employment Insurance) payments fairer.

Flaherty did boost the number of weeks unemployed, eligible workers could collect from 45 to 50 weeks, but benefits levels remains at a low of 55% of earnings.  Meanwhile, laid off workers in cities like Toronto, Ottawa and Oshawa still have work more hours to collect benefits, than their counterparts in the Atlantic provinces.

And Flaherty also didn't listen to labour experts who wanted the number of hours worked for EI eligibility to be reduced to 360, from the current 420 to 900.

In his own riding of Whitby-Oshawa, the misery grows and grows. Latest stats show 4,200 more Oshawa workers collected EI in November, a whopping 99.1% increase from 2,110 in November 2007. In total, another half a million Canadians were forced to resort to EI, up 12.3% from a year ago, while Canada lost another 70,600 jobs.

Experts warn job losses will continue to stack up this year.

Still, our jobless rate remains at 6.6%, compared to a staggering 14% in the 1980 recession.  Cash-strapped consumers, carrying record debt of $1.3 trillion, may be thankful for Flaherty's tax cut.  But they're angry their tax dollars are bailing out the very ones who allowed this economic disaster to implode on the world.

We need trust, but there is none.

And today, all of Flaherty's numeric wizardry may not mean a thing if the Liberals join the NDP and Bloc and pull the plug.

Tune into Newstalk CFRB 1010 at 7:30 a.m. for my financial commentary with Bill Carroll.

Linda Leatherdale.

 

 

 

 
TODAY'S BUDGET DAY. So, Wake Up:

WE NEED RELIEF, NOT HIGHER TAXES, FEES AND INTEREST RATES!!!

It blows the mind that our leaders who are counting on consumers to lead us out of the biggest economic meltdown in history, just don't get it.

That the last thing cash-strapped families struggling with record household debt of $1.3 trillion need are more hands in their pockets.

Today is Budget Day in Ottawa.  And today we'll hear our country, once the envy of the world with fat-cat surpluses, is going into the red by up to $60 billion as they bail out big-time players, like banks and auto giants.

That's our tax dollars at work.  Remember: Today's debt, tomorrow's taxes.

But while socialism reigns on Bay Street, it's brutal capitalism on Main Street, where a powerful bank lobby is confident Finance Minister Jim Flaherty will back off any threat to stop the gouging of higher fees and rising interest rates, even as the Bank of Canada rate falls to a historic low of 1%.

First, poor consumers got fleeced with rising rates on credit cards, with TD Visa leading the charge, hiking its rate to 24.75% for customers who missed two consecutive minimum payments.  Now, TD is hiking the rate charged on unsecured lines of credit from 3.9% to 4.4% above prime, now at 3%.  That's a 7.4% rate, effective March 1, for an obscene spread of 6.4% when stacked against Canada's bank rate.  TD is also charging customers a $35 inactivity fee, if they fail to use their line of credit within the year.  Bank of Montreal is also hiking its rate on unsecured lines of credit by 1% to 3% above prime.

And here's timing at its best.  Ontario Premier Dalton McGuinty - the leader who once said read my lips, "no new taxes" then slapped us with his health tax, the biggest tax grab in the province's history - is now thinking of harmonizing Ottawa's hated GST with the provincial sales tax.

The Ontario Chamber of Commerce hails the move as a $100-million benefit for businesses, burdened by the tedious task of administering two sales tax regimes - both with their own weird rules and regulations. That's why so many years ago I dumped more than 750,000 anti-GST protest coupons on the steps of Parliament Hill, warning if the then 9% value-added tax passed into law, Canada would be the only country in the world forcing its people to pay two sales tax systems.  Even the United States, our largest trading partner, refused to hit its people with a VAT at the same time we were opening the floodgates of trade wide open with the free trade agreement.  The U.S. still has no VAT or GST.

But our GST, whose rate was set at 7%, did not just hit goods, it hit services, too - like legal fees, insurance premiums, even health care services, and heating our homes.

So think about it:  Flaherty may have cut the hated GST from 7% to 5%, but if it's harmonized with Ontario's 8% sales taxes - we'll start paying 13% on a host of services we never paid tax on.

Back in 1997, the Jean Chretien Liberal government convinced Nova Scotia, New Brunswick and Newfoundland to harmonize their sales taxes and overnight, the tax more then doubled on gasoline, heating oil, privately-sold used cars and other items.  A Nova Scotia government study estimated consumers paid $84 million more in taxes in the first year of harmonization, while businesses paid less thanks to new tax credits.

It's a no brainer.  If costs for businesses head higher, it's passed on to the consumer.  But if costs go down, it goes to their bottom line.

Now, here's where consumers get hit again.  Visa and Mastercard have been hiking their credit card transaction fees for small businesses, with a 25% hike on June 1, and another hike on Oct. 1, 2008.  Now these big players want into the debit business, and surely higher fees await. These higher costs will be paid for by the lowly consumer.

Listen up, Flaherty:  Our wallets are out of money, we're driving on empty and we sit in fear of losing a job, if we haven't lost one already. This is not the time for wolves at our door.  This is the time to protect Main Street.

This budget better be fair.  Or all hell is going to break lose.

Mark my words.

Linda Leatherdale.

 

 

 

 

 
LISTEN TO LEATHERDALE ON CFRB

I have a new home - the most popular all-talk radio station CFRB, 1010 AM.

Every weekday at 7:30 a.m., I'll join Toronto's best morning man - Bill Carroll - to give you financial advice and hold your hand during this global economic meltdown to help you survive.

There is no subject we won't touch.  From surviving a layoff, to budgeting, to why tax cuts make sense, and why real estate and RRSPs remain cornerstones of a good financial plan - we'll be there to help.

My fight against the high cost of credit continues, so too does my crusade for fairness on Main Street, while Bay Street and Wall Street get bailouts with our tax dollars.  Bottomline is it's hardworking taxpaying families, and gutsy small business entrepreneurs, who will lead us out of this mess.

They need defenders in this meltdown.  And that's who we are. Defenders of Main Street.  Bottom line is consumers account for two-thirds of our economy, yet they are drowning in a sea of record household debt now at $1.3 trillion.

We're going to help you get out of debt, save for the future, and give our children a brighter future.

So listen every day to Toronto's Newstalk 1010 CFRB, and reap our rewards.

Linda Leatherdale. 

 
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