Winnipeg Free Press (Newspaper) - July 31, 2015, Winnipeg, Manitoba
C M Y K PAGE A11
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" There is literally no circumstance
where anyone could be worse off, because
the increase in the universal child
care benefit is so large that it compensates
for everything else." -
Employment Minister Pierre Poilievre,
speaking last week in Halifax.
O TTAWA - It was billed as Christmas
in July: hundreds of dollars
in child- care benefits landed
in the bank accounts of 3.8 million
families with children aged 17 and
younger.
Questions about how much of it parents
would get to keep arrived almost
as soon as the money did.
Asked last week to describe a
scenario in which a family would
not benefit from the government's
largesse, Poilievre was unequivocal:
there is none.
Is he right?
Spoiler alert: The Canadian Press
Baloney Meter is a dispassionate
examination of political statements
culminating in a ranking of accuracy
on a scale of " no baloney" to " full
of baloney" ( complete methodology
below).
This one earns a rating of " a little
baloney": it's missing information
about how much families benefit and
how that's calculated by government.
THE FACTS
The Conservatives introduced the
monthly universal child care benefit
payment in 2006, shortly after taking
office. For nine years, the payments
amounted to $ 100 a month for every
child under age six.
This year, the government boosted
the monthly payments to $ 160 for
every child under six, and introduced
a new, $ 60 monthly payment for children
aged six to 17.
The universal child care benefit is
taxed on the lower- income earner in
the home. The benefit is taxed at a federal
rate of about 11.5 per cent, so the
average family with one child under
six will owe about $ 220 in federal
taxes next April ($ 1,920 for 12 months
of UCCB payments worth $ 160, multiplied
by 11.5 per cent).
The parliamentary budget officer
estimates provincial taxes on the benefit
will be worth about half of the $ 565
million the federal government will
take in from the increased benefit.
The government has eliminated the
child tax credit, which in the last tax
year would have been worth about
$ 343 in federal tax relief per child in
2015 ( the credit is worth $ 2,293 per
child, multiplied by a federal tax rate
of 15 per cent).
Even with the loss of the tax credit,
the increased child care benefit ensures
each home receives more money
on the whole, the government says.
WHAT THE EXPERTS SAY
" It is hard to conceive of a family
that is actually worse off - you'd have
to imagine a very odd scenario," said
Tammy Schirle, director of the Centre
for Economic Research and Policy
Analysis at Wilfrid Laurier University
in Waterloo, Ont.
In only a few cases could people lose
money, Schirle said, but that would
require looking at the net effect of the
increased benefit on housing subsidies
and child- care subsidies that be could
be clawed back for every extra dollar
the benefit provides.
The child- care benefit doesn't count
against income- tested programs delivered
outside the income tax system,
such as the guaranteed income supplement,
old age security and employment
insurance.
Families with children for the most
part are " not in the hole" financially
because of the change, " but they're
certainly not as well off as they could
have been," said Jennifer Robson from
Carleton University in Ottawa.
The government provided The Canadian
Press with tables illustrating the
benefit to families with incomes from
$ 30,000 to $ 200,000. The tables assume
parents are applying for fitness tax
credits, claiming a child- care expense
deduction - for those who use more
formal child- care arrangements -
and, where they qualify, applying
for up to $ 2,000 in tax benefits from
income splitting.
Robson said to get some of the
benefits, parents would have to spend
thousands of dollars ahead of time,
such as a $ 600 fitness tax benefit that
a single parent earning $ 30,000 a year
with four children would have to spend
$ 4,000 to receive.
On average, families can expect to
keep $ 15 of the extra $ 60 the government
added to the value of the monthly
benefit payments, once federal and
provincial taxes are taken into account,
as well as the loss of the child
tax credit, said Fred O'Riordan, a tax
expert with Ernst & Young.
THE VERDICT
The statement contains " a little
baloney."
Poilievre is correct when he says
no one is worse off with the increased
benefit because its size alone " compensates
for everything else," but
experts say the federal government's
assumptions are unrealistic for some
households.
METHODOLOGY
The Baloney Meter is a project of
The Canadian Press that examines
the level of accuracy in statements
made by politicians. Each claim is researched
and assigned a rating based
on the following scale:
No baloney - the statement is accurate
A little baloney - the statement is
mostly accurate but more information
is required
Some baloney - the statement is
partly accurate but important details
are missing
A lot of baloney - the statement is
mostly inaccurate but contains elements
of truth
Full of baloney - the statement is
completely inaccurate
SOURCES
Finance Canada backgrounder on tax
changes ( http:// www. fin. gc. ca/ n14/
data/ 14- 155- 1- eng. asp)
Finance Canada illustrative scenarios
for family tax changes ( https:// goo. gl/
vYueDb)
Fred O'Riordan, tax policy expert, Ernst
& Young ( https:// ca. linkedin. com/ pub/
fred- o- riordan/ 2b/ 563/ 7aa)
Jennifer Robson, associate professor,
Carleton University's School of Public
Policy and Administration ( https:// carleton.
ca/ politicalmanagement/ people/
jennifer- robson)
Tammy Schirle, director of the Laurier
Centre for Economic Research and
Policy Analysis, Wilfrid Laurier University
( http:// www. tammyschirle. org/)
" No families will receive less under
changes to child care benefit: Poilievre."
The Canadian Press. July 23, 2015
( http:// www. ctvnews. ca/ politics/ no- families-
will- receive- less- under- changes- tochild-
care- benefit- poilievre- 1.2484396)
Parliamentary budget officer report:
The Family Tax Cut, March 17, 2015
( http:// www. pbo- dpb. gc. ca/ files/ files/
Family- Tax- Cut- EN. pdf)
- The Canadian Press
Reality check on payments to parents
Universal child care benefit dissected
By Jordan Press
SEAN KILPATRICK / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES
Employment Minister Pierre Poilievre called the disbursement of millions of dollars
in benefits ' Christmas in July.' Critics said after taxes, parents wouldn't get much.
A_ 11_ Jul- 31- 15_ FP_ 01. indd A11 7/ 30/ 15 10: 12: 20 PM
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