1995 Canadian federal budget

{{Short description|Second government spending plan under Paul Martin}}

{{Infobox Government Budget

| title = Budget of the Canadian Federal Government

| year = 1995

| country = Canada

| previous_budget = 1994 Canadian federal budget

| previous_year = 1994

| next_budget = 1996 Canadian federal budget

| next_year = 1996

| image = Logo_of_the_1995_Canadian_federal_budget.png

| imagesize = 250

| caption =

| presented = 27 February 1995

| passed =

| parliament = 35th

| party = Liberal

| minister = Paul Martin

| Total_Revenue = 140.257 billion

| Total_Expenditures = 170.263 billion

| spending =

| tax_cut =

| debt_payment =

| deficit = $30.006 billion{{cite web|title=Canada's deficits and surpluses, 1963–2014|url=http://www.cbc.ca/news2/interactives/canada-deficit/|website=CBC News|publisher=CBC/Radio-Canada|accessdate=25 April 2015}}

| debt =

| bill =

| bill_link =

| url =

}}

The Canadian federal budget for fiscal year 1995–96 was presented by Minister of Finance Paul Martin in the House of Commons of Canada on 27 February 1995.{{Cite web|last=|first=|date= 28 February 1995 |title=La Presse|url=http://numerique.banq.qc.ca/patrimoine/details/52327/2179419|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200626015722/http://numerique.banq.qc.ca/patrimoine/details/52327/2179419 |archive-date=2020-06-26 |access-date=2020-06-17|website=numerique.banq.qc.ca}}

Background

The budget is presented in a context of a fast-growing US economy and moderate inflation but a severe increase in interest rates that started in early 1994 dramatically increased public debt charges and in turn reduced budgetary margin for the Liberal government.{{harvnb|Budget plan|pp=17–20}}

Taxes

The capital gains exemption is maintained for farming and small businesses.{{cite news |last1=Le Cours |first1=Rudy |title=Un voeu des entreprises sera exaucé : moins de subventions aux entreprises |url=https://numerique.banq.qc.ca/patrimoine/details/52327/2179419 |accessdate=1 November 2020 |publisher=La Presse |date=28 February 1995|page=A4}}

=Cost recovery initiatives=

In order to increase revenues, the budget plans for new cost recovery and user fees initiatives, notably:

  • A new immigration fee of $975 per adult;
  • Increased fees for citizenship;
  • Increase in the interest rate charged by Revenue Canada for late payments on taxes, CPP and EI contributions;
  • Increased cost recovery for the provision of consular and trade development services;
  • Introduction of fees for commercial products provided by Environment Canada.

These initiatives were to generate $450 millions in annual revenues in 1995–96 and up to $600 millions when fully implemented.{{harvnb|Budget plan|pp=37–39}}

Expenditures

=Program spending=

==Administrative measures==

The budget announces massive cuts to program expenditures, amounting to 18.9% by 1997–98. A new Expenditure Management System (EMS) was announced prior to the budget announcement on February 15 by Art Eggleton, the President of the Treasury Board. The EMS aimes to implement a new results-based approach to public management and strict cost control.{{harvnb|Budget plan|p=37}}

The 2 $ banknote is discontinued and replaced by a 2 $ coin starting in early 1996.

Other administrative restructuring is also announced in the budget:{{harvnb|Budget plan|pp=39–40}}

==Cuts to business subsidies==

The most dramatic cuts are related to subsidies to business organizations, with a scheduled cut amounting to 60.4% between 1994–95 and 1997–98.{{harvnb|Budget plan|pp=41–46}}{{cite news |last1=Le Cours |first1=Rudy |title=Moins de dépenses, moins de fonctionnaire |url=https://numerique.banq.qc.ca/patrimoine/details/52327/2179419 |accessdate=1 November 2020 |publisher=La Presse |date=28 February 1995|page=A3}}

  • Effective August 1, 1995 the annual subsidy of $560 millions to the railway companies is eliminated;{{harvnb|Budget plan|pp=42–43}}
  • The federal government budgeted a $1.6 billion one-time payment as compensation for land owner whose land values are affected by the abolition of freight subsidies.
  • Subsidies for Atlantic region freight are abolished starting on July 1, 1995;
  • Dairy and other agricultural subsidies are to be reduced by 30% over 2 years;
  • Subsidies to cultural industries are to be reduced, including an-8% reduction in the postal subsidies for Canadian books and magazines.
  • Industry Canada is scheduled to terminate 44 of its 54 business subsidies programs.

=Transfers to provinces=

==Creation of the [[Canada Health and Social Transfer|Canada Social Transfer]]==

The budget announced major changes to transfers to provinces. Up until 1995, transfers consisted mostly of:

The budget announced that the first two programs are to be combined into a single block transfer called the Canada Health and Social Transfer (CHST){{efn|Called the Canada Social Transfer in budget documents.}} starting in the fiscal year 1996–97. In the budget the CHST is designated as Canada Social Transfer (CST) which coincidentally is the name of a successor transfer to the CHST.{{harvnb|Budget plan|pp=51–54}}

==Other changes==

The Public Utilities Income Tax Transfer Act (PUITTA) is suspended after April 1, 1995{{sfn|Budget Implementation Act, 1995|loc=s. 63}} and the PUITTA is repealed on March 31, 1999, providing the federal government with more than $200 millions in annual savings.{{harvnb|Budget plan|pp=48–49}}

=Privatization=

The budget announced the privatization efforts were to continue with multiple state-owned corporations to be sold to the private sector.{{efn|The budget lists notably : Petro-Canada, Canadian National, the Air Navigation System (ANS) within Transport Canada and the Canada Communication Group.{{harvsp|Budget Facts|page=19}}}}

Many other federal departments and agencies were to operate on a more commercial basis.{{sfn|Budget Facts|page=20}}

Legislative history

Most of the content of the budget was included in the Bill C-76 (An Act to implement certain provisions of the budget tabled in Parliament on February 27, 1995) that was adopted by the House of Commons on 6 June 1995. Reform, Bloc, NDP and one of the two Progressive-conservative (Elsie Wayne) MPs voted against the budget while Gilles Bernier (the only independent MP elected in 1993) and Jag Bhaduria (formerly part of the Liberal caucus), voted in favor like. One Liberal MP (Warren Allmand) voted against the budget, protesting budget cuts and was shortly thereafter relieved of his position as chair of the House of Commons Standing Committee on Justice.[https://www.ourcommons.ca/DocumentViewer/en/35-1/house/sitting-212/journals Journals of the House of Commons for June 6, 1995] The bill received royal assent on 22 June 1995.

class="wikitable" align="center" style="text-align:center; font-size:90%"

|+ House of Commons vote on the
Budget Implementation Act, 1995[https://www.ourcommons.ca/DocumentViewer/en/35-1/house/sitting-212/journals House of Commons Debates, 35th Parliament, 1st Session], vol. 11, pp. 13348-13349.

colspan="2"|Party

! width=60px|Yea

! width=60px|Nay

! width=60px|Abstention

! width=60px|Absent

style="background:{{Canadian party colour|CA|Liberal}};" |

| align="left"|Liberals

| 140

| 1

| 13

| 23

style="background:{{Canadian party colour|CA|BQ}};" |

| align="left"|Bloc Québécois

| 0

| 37

| 14

| 2

style="background:{{Canadian party colour|CA|Reform}};" |

| align="left"|Reform

| 0

| 40

| 0

| 12

style="background:{{Canadian party colour|CA|NDP}};" |

| align="left"|New Democratic

| 0

| 6

| 0

| 3

style="background:{{Canadian party colour|CA|Progressive Conservative}};" |

| align="left"| Progressive Conservative

| 0

| 1

| 0

| 1

style="background:{{Canadian party colour|CA|Independent}};" |

| align="left"|Independents

| 1

| 0

| 0

| 0

colspan=2|Total

! 141

! 85

! 27

! 42

References

=Notes=

{{Notelist}}

=References=

{{Reflist}}

= Official documents =

==Budget documents==

{{refbegin}}

  • {{cite book |title=Budget plan: including supplementary information and Notices of Ways and Means Motions |date=27 February 1995 |publisher=Government of Canada |location=Ottawa |isbn=0660155672 |access-date=3 November 2022 |url=https://budget.canada.ca/archives/budget95/binb/budget1995-eng.pdf|ref={{harvid|Budget plan}}}}
  • {{cite book |title=Budget Facts|url=http://fin.gc.ca/budget95/fact/facts.pdf|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170612210731/http://fin.gc.ca/budget95/fact/facts.pdf|archive-date=2017-06-12|date=27 February 1995 |publisher=Government of Canada |location=Ottawa|ref={{harvid|Budget Facts}}}}
  • [https://budget.canada.ca/archives/budget95/speech/speech.pdf Budget Speech]
  • [https://budget.canada.ca/archives/budget95/binb/brief.pdf Budget in Brief]

{{refend}}

==Enacted legislations==

{{refbegin}}

  • {{wikicite| reference = {{Cite canlaw|short title=Budget Implementation Act, 1995|title = An Act to implement certain provisions of the budget tabled in Parliament on February 27, 1995|abbr = S.C.|year=1995|chapter=17|link=https://www.parl.ca/LegisInfo/BillDetails.aspx?Language=E&billId=2328382}} | ref = {{harvid|Budget Implementation Act, 1995}}}}

{{refend}}

{{Canada federal budget}}

{{Jean Chrétien}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Canadian federal budget, 1995}}

1995

Canada

Category:1995 in Canadian politics

Budget, 1995

Budget, 1995

Budget, 1995