The budget imposed a series of new taxes to increase government revenues:[3]
A 3% surtax on all individuals starting on 1 July 1986 ;
The surtax instituted by the previous budget is continued until its scheduled end. The two surtaxes are in effect simultaneously from 1 July to 31 December 1986.[a][4]
A 3% surtax on all corporations starting on 1 January 1987 ;
The previous 5% on large corporation is set to expire on 31 December 1986, as originally planned;[5]
A 1% increase in the federal sales tax rate effective 1 April 1986;
Increases in excise taxes and duties on alcohol (4% increase) and tobacco (6% increase) with immediate effect.
Tax incentives
The budget announced two improvements to social assistance tax incentives:
The creation of the refundable federal sales tax credit, a new refundable tax credit of up to $50 per person per year;[6]
A prepayment system is instituted for the child tax credit : advance payments are to be maid in November 1986 to claimants with low-income. Revenue Canada will used past tax returns to automatically assess eligibility.[6]
Corporate tax reform
The budget announced a reform of the corporate tax system: several tax incentives are abolished and a schedule of corporate tax rate decrease is announced.[7][8]
The budget announced the government would ask members of the House of Commons and Senate to take a $1,000 pay cut in 1986, matching an identical cut to the salary of the Prime Minister and all cabinet ministers. The salaries of deputy ministers and political staff was also to be frozen in 1986, with other executives public servant to receive pay increases not exceeding 2%.[9]
Cuts of $500 million in non-statutory spending for 1986–87 was also announced, with details to be released after the budget. Official Development Assistance (i.e. international aid) was to be cut by $83 millions and $203 millions (in 1986–87 and 1987–88 respectively) despite the government's pledge to bring the ODA budget to 0.6% of GNP by 1990.[10]
Privatization
The budget announced the privatization efforts were to continue with multiple state-owned corporations to be sold to the private sector.[d]
Reactions
Media
Most newspapers focused on the tax increases announced in the budget (notably the surtax and the excise tax increases) with the following front page headlines:
Income, alcohol, cigaret taxes up in Wilson's deficit-cutting budget[12]
— The Globe and Mail
OUCH: Wilson puts $1.5-billion bite on taxpayers to cut deficit[13]
— The Ottawa Citizen
Income tax, levies on booze, tobacco rise to fight deficit[14]
The Globe and Mail editorial received the budget favorably, pointing at several welcome initiatives (corporate and sales taxes reform, tightening of tax incentives) and overall commitment to fiscal responsibility.[16] Frédéric Wagnière in La Presse was more nuanced, pointing that the mix between tax increases and budget cuts seemed to focus more on the former, with a risk of hindering the economic recovery.[17]
^Wills, Terrance (27 February 1986). "Income tax, levies on booze, tobacco rise to fight deficit". The Gazette. Montreal. p. A1.
^Jannard, Maurice (27 February 1986). "Hausse d'impôts de $1,5 milliard". La Presse (in French). Montréal. p. A1. Retrieved 22 October 2024.
^"The budget's teeth". The Globe and Mail. Ottawa. 27 February 1986. p. A6.
^1 Wagnière, Frédéric (27 February 1986). "Un budget trop austère". La Presse (in French). Montréal. p. A2. Retrieved 22 October 2024.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
^ abReceiver General of Canada (1 October 1987). Public accounts of Canada. Vol. I : Summary Report and Financial Statements. Ottawa: Supply and Services Canada. ISBN0-660-12525-0. Retrieved 22 October 2024.