December 15th 2000 - Archive - The Ottawa Citizen

Shots from both sides in the Liberal `war on poverty’: No: Canada can’t afford huge cost

Shots from both sides in the Liberal `war on poverty’: No: Canada can’t afford huge cost

When the Citizen asked me to write on the reported latest Liberal fancy — a guaranteed annual income program — I asked whether it wanted (a) a political rebuttal (b) a constitutional rebuttal (c) a purely economic rebuttal (d) a…

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November 30th 2000 - Archive - The Ottawa Citizen

Even the losers get lucky sometimes: As Liberal ballots were counted, an Alliance insider was counting his own party’s blessings.

Even the losers get lucky sometimes: As Liberal ballots were counted, an Alliance insider was counting his own party’s blessings.

Losing the federal election to the Chretien Liberals may, as Lady Churchill said to her husband following electoral defeat in 1945, “be a blessing in disguise” for the Canadian Alliance. For the prospects facing a third-term Chretien government hold the…

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June 13th 2000 - Tax - AIMS

Taking the Road Less Taxing

Taking the Road Less Taxing

In 1997, the provinces and Ottawa reached two important agreements, one about benefits directed toward children and the second about the provinces’ flexibility in designing their own tax systems. Together these agreements give the Atlantic provinces a historic opportunity to…

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November 27th 1998 - Archive - Calgary Herald

Per-child tax deduction would be fairer: The bias shown by the federal taxation system in favour of two-income families over single-income families means the government believes some children are worth more than others. Kenneth Boessenkool and James Davies argue that it’s time to return fairness to families.

Per-child tax deduction would be fairer: The bias shown by the federal taxation system in favour of two-income families over single-income families means the government believes some children are worth more than others. Kenneth Boessenkool and James Davies argue that it’s time to return fairness to families.

Are some families’ kids worth more than others’ kids? An innocuous question with, for most of us, an obvious answer. Yet if he were asked it in the House of Commons, Finance Minister Paul Martin might sense a setup and…

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November 26th 1998 - Family - CD Howe Institute

GIVING MOM AND DAD A BREAK: RETURNING FAIRNESS TO FAMILIES IN CANADA’S TAX AND TRANSFER SYSTEM

GIVING MOM AND DAD A BREAK: RETURNING FAIRNESS TO FAMILIES IN CANADA’S TAX AND TRANSFER SYSTEM

Using Canada’s tax system as a social policy tool has created unfairness in federal income tax policy, hurting Canadian families, particularly those with children, argues a study released by the C.D. Howe Institute. The authors suggest that providing a universal…

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