moved:
That, in the opinion of this House, the government should recognize the onerous burden of taxation upon the Canadian family, and the pressures that such taxation places upon the family, and that this government take immediate measures to provide the family with tax relief, including balancing the federal budget.
Mr. Speaker, I rise today to speak on Motion No. 148 which highlights the issue of the level of taxation that the Canadian family faces and recommends the course the government should pursue to relieve the financial and tax burden on families.
The debate today is particularly relevant in light of the federal budget tabled earlier this month. I introduced this motion to highlight the issue of taxation and the family. Normally the taxation issue is associated with individuals or with corporations. Rarely is this issue ever associated with the family in this place.
It distresses me to say that it has certainly not been a theme of this government to recognize families in its policy development beyond its perfunctory rhetoric.
I recall my beginnings as a politician. In the town of Coquitlam, there was a forum called together of federal candidates before the last election. At that forum were the candidates from all parties and members of our community. It was sponsored by a local communi-
ty newspaper, the Tri-City News , that wanted to find out what the issues were in our area.
Candidates from all parties were there: the NDP incumbent, the Liberal candidate who was the provincial president for the Liberal Party and many others. They were called on to answer to the issues that were important to our community. There was free discussion. It was all on tape. The report of that discussion went into the newspaper the following week.
At that time I did not have much experience in politics. However, I did have experience as a community volunteer, a community member, a teacher and a mother.
The issue of family distress, the monetary and cultural pressures on the families that I saw in my community, brought me to consider that perhaps change might be possible in the political process. That is what brought me to the political arena.
That afternoon in that setting the issue of the family was primary. People talked about high taxes, their hopes for the future, the choice for young mothers to stay at home, the value of parenting and less government intrusion into families. Those were the topics of discussion chosen by the people in my community.
That day I was able to answer their questions with conviction because that is exactly where I come from and that is exactly why I aligned myself with the Reform Party. The Reform Party listens to the individuals, the families and the grassroots of the community. That day again affirmed my decision to take on the risk of political life.
Those families are not skilled at the lobby table. They are not well funded to be able to bend the ears of politicians, to organize or to pressure policy direction. However, the well-being of families is what is in the hearts of Canadians and that well-being will predict the strength of the future of the country.
By introducing this motion, I wish to establish the fact that the Canadian family has been affected by the overspending and resulting over-taxation of previous and present governments and is in desperate need of tax relief. It is a fact that the federal government can provide the Canadian family with tax relief by balancing its revenues and spending.
Even as I stood as a candidate for the Reform Party, it proposed a zero in three plan to balance the budget. Through reasoned spending priorities and choices, if Reform had been elected in 1993, this year's budget would not have been looking at a projected deficit of $25 billion but would have seen us making decisions on how to allocate a budget surplus. The books would have been balanced and debt reduction and/or tax relief would have been a reality.
As my motion indicates, it is through a balanced budget that tax relief for families will be realized.
How is it that we got where we are? The inability of governments to address the real security of Canadians through proper fiscal management has a very long history. Thinking back to 1972, the then Liberal government came into power with a debt load of $16 billion. It was voted out of office in 1984, 12 years later, leaving behind it the travesty of a $160 billion federal debt which has been a millstone to the prosperity of our country and to every citizen.
The Tories could not rein in their spending and again the debt grew, first to $200 billion in 1988 and then to $485 billion in 1993.
Today, still with no firm commitment to deficit elimination by, once again, a Liberal government, the security and future of every man, woman and child stands at the mercy of an incredible $578 billion debt which is projected to increase to $620 billion by 1997.
Meanwhile, political parties of all persuasions throughout the provinces have recognized the need for deficit elimination. Even the separatist government in Quebec now recognizes the need to balance its provincial budget with a stated goal of a balanced budget only four years away.
Not surprisingly, the results of overspending over the last 30 years by successive Liberal and Tory governments have produced a record of continually increasing taxes on the Canadian family. For instance, from 1961 to 1994, taxes on the Canadian family rose some 1,167 per cent. The rate of those tax increases far outstrips the corresponding increases in the cost of food, shelter and clothing over the same period.
In 1994, the average Canadian family earned $46,488. The Fraser Institute's Tax Facts 9 outlined the tax bill that this average Canadian family faced by categorizing the taxes by type. This is what it found.
Income tax, perhaps the most easily identifiable tax, accounted for $8,250. Another continual frustration to families are the sales taxes which take another bite of $3,278. Excise taxes gobble up another $973. Then there is the auto fuel and motor vehicle taxes of $709.
There is a big bite with social security, medical and hospital taxes of $3,817 and property taxes of $1,848. There are import duties of $331, a profits tax of $1,306, natural resource taxes of $354 and all the other types of sundry taxes not included in the above are $361.
If these are added up, the total taxes paid by the average family is $21,228. That works out to 46 per cent of its cash income. It means almost half of the working hours are spent on behalf of various levels of government or others.
It is little wonder that increasing numbers of Canadians are suffering from tax fatigue. For instance, in the Angus Reid survey in 1990, 45 per cent of Canadians expressed their concern of being
financially under stress, while in 1989 that figure was only 38 per cent; still a large number.
According to a 1995 Angus Reid poll, over half of Canadians stated that they were finding it harder to make ends meet than just five years before that.
Tragically, this financial stress is especially common among young families. A two-year project entitled "Prospects for Young Families" found that in the 1970s, families headed by a person under 25 had a median income of 80 per cent of the income of all family groups combined. By 1992, however, young families had a median income of only 54 per cent of the income of all other families.
There is something wrong with this picture when hard working families find that the harder they try, the farther behind they get. If this is a land of opportunity and the envy of countries around the world, why then do we rob our families of hope or achievement as they continually run harder to accomplish less?
The effect of this level of taxation leaves the family with less and less after tax income. According to StatsCan, since 1989, after tax family income has dropped some 6.5 per cent. If we go back a full 10 years, the picture is no better.
The StatsCan study found that the average family's after tax income in 1984 was $43,204. In 1993, the figure was $43,225. That is a long time for the average family after tax income to rise by just $21-10 years.
With declining disposable income, families are left with less money to spend on their children and less money with which to realize their dreams and secure their futures. It has been demonstrated that it takes twice the working hours now to support a family as in the 1970s. The opinion of Canadians again reflects this reality. Fifty-two per cent of Canadians surveyed believe "it is just not possible to support a family on one income any more".
There is a direct correlation between the levels of taxation and the resulting loss of net income in families and the rise of dual income earner families. For instance, in 1967, 58 per cent of Canadian families had one income earner. By 1991, however, only 19 per cent of families were classified as traditional earner families while dual earner families had skyrocketed to 61 per cent.
Negative societal effects resulting from the rise of the dual wage earner family have just begun to be reported. Particularly distressing are the effects on children who with both parents working are placed in institutionalized day care.
A recent study by Dr. Mark Genuis of the National Foundation for Family Research and Education demonstrated that non-parental care of children undermines the bonding between a parent and a child. The study concluded that "insecure bonding to parents in childhood is a direct cause of clinical levels of emotional and behavioural problems in adolescence".
There are negative effects on families themselves. Thirty-five per cent of homes with both parents working outside the home with children under six experience moderate to severe levels of stress. Those attempting to balance those same pressures while coping with toddlers under three similarly report severe stress.
Excessive taxation does hurt families. What has been the response of the government since being elected in 1993? What is the Liberal approach to home economics? Their record is simply a continuation of neglect and disregard for the financial challenges of the Canadian family. It is a record of sly and subtle tax increases in spite of the finance minister's rhetorical pronouncements to the contrary. In short, it is a record that has failed to recognize the tax burden that families face.
Let me list some of the examples of tax increases the government has and will be implementing. The full fiscal impact of the 22 tax increases from all its budgets will be to suck approximately $8.8 billion from the pockets of Canadians and their families.
For instance, recent proposed changes to the RRSP rules of reducing the age of mandatory withdrawal from 71 to 69 will net federal coffers some $100 million by the year 2000. Freezing the RRSP dollar contribution to $13,500 until 2003 will garner the federal government some $215 million more over the next three years.
RRSPs are fundamental to a family's savings and wealth. Families use them not only for retirement purposes but also for purchasing homes and other investments. Instead of changing RRSP rules to further line its pockets, the government should empower families to have greater control over their private savings and finances. Reform's super RRSPs would do just that. It would empower families and give them greater control over their personal finances.
Other examples of Liberal tax increases include excise taxes which will amount to almost $1.7 billion over the next three years. Not to be forgotten of course is the government's failure to abolish the GST which will be another $17.9 billion tax grab in 1996-97 alone.
In spite of the increased revenue gouging by this government, it has no plans to offer Canadian families the tax relief they deserve and desperately need. It still has not committed to deficit elimination. The finance minister has even stated that there will not be any tax relief for some time.
Rather than recognize the contribution and importance of families and the incredible tax load they carry, the government has other priorities. One of those is the federal plan for gender equality. Millions of family tax dollars are being poured into every federal department to fund gender analysis where the goal of all women
must be to pursue economic autonomy and their value is determined by their activity in the paid workforce.
Recent government initiatives in employment equity, pay equity and day care are going to cost Canadians billions of dollars and in the meantime remove value and choice from some of our most fundamental institutions. This is all predicated on a warped and intrusive government priority agenda.
The government's mindset of neglect and disregard for the family is also reflected in other misguided spending priorities. This is illustrated in the comparison of federal spending on major diseases in our society.
In 1994-95 the federal government spent $43.4 million on the national AIDS strategy, yet in the same year it spent only $4 million on breast cancer. Considering that one in nine women will experience breast cancer in her life compared with approximately 2,000 deaths by AIDS each year, Canadian families have a right to demand an explanation of how government determines and prioritizes the allocation of their hard earned tax dollars.
These examples of overtaxation and misguided spending priorities assault the sensibilities of families. In spite of the observations I have made, there are policy alternatives. Less, not more government is one of the solutions. Social policy spending must be targeted to those most in need and public policy should promote choice and empower families.
Income splitting is one practical solution. The Reform Party's taxation task force is examining this concept to better the economic and tax status of families. Presently two incomes of say $30,000 receive much better tax treatment than a single income of $60,000. Tax treatment to allow spouses to declare and split their household income would level the playing field between dual and single wage earner families. Income splitting would level the taxation field by recognizing and valuing the idea of a home team.
The child care expense deduction could also be reformed. Presently this income tax provision allows parents to deduct expenses incurred for child care that is non-parental. The effect of this is that parents who send their children to camps or daycare facilities, or who hire a nanny can deduct that amount from their income tax. However, parents who stay at home with their children are not eligible for this deduction.
This deduction could be converted into a child tax credit that would expand choice and opportunity for families. In the last budget this government instead raised the age eligibility limit for children from 14 to 16. The result is that parental and non-institutional child care options are still not recognized in our tax law, but what is recognized is the subsidization of child care for a 16 year old teenager.
Recognizing this tax inequity and the unfair tax treatment families face, my colleague from Calgary Centre introduced a private member's bill in the first session of this Parliament which would have provided a tax deduction for all parents regardless of their income status or method of child care chosen. What was the response of this government to this innovative proposal? The proposal was dismissed out of hand and relegated to the overcrowded never never land of private members' business.
Earlier this month I joined with the member for Mississauga South to support another private member's bill that would convert the child care expense deduction to a $5,000 tax credit for parents with children under the age of seven and a $3,000 credit for children between the ages of 7 and 13.
This proposal was developed in conjunction with Dr. Mark Genuis of the Calgary based National Foundation for Family Research and Education. This proposal will expand choice and will recognize the importance and value of parenting and family in our income tax law. It is innovative proposals such as this one that can and should be implemented immediately.
Reformers believe that just as a family must balance its books, so too must the federal government. With this approach in mind we developed our zero in three proposal which we presented to the public prior to and during the last election campaign.
In February 1995 we presented our taxpayers budget which was designed to balance the federal budget within three years and implement measures to prevent future deficits and secure the interests of taxpaying families. Reformers believe that balancing the federal budget is the primary means by which tax relief can be offered and realized for families in the long term.
It is no accident that the wording of this motion we are debating today includes specific reference to deficit elimination. To date this government has failed to present any plan to balance the federal budget.
Government priorities in spending must also recognize not only special interests but the best interests of families and thus the best interests of society as a whole. Finally, the bias and discriminatory aspects that impact negatively upon the family could and should be eliminated from the Income Tax Act and its regulations.
In conclusion, it is crucial for the future of the family that government acknowledge and recognize the burden of taxation it has placed on the Canadian family. It must realize that this burden
impacts the viability and the contribution of this fundamental institution. It must realize that a dollar left in the hands of a taxpayer is better than a dollar in the hands of a bureaucrat or politician. It must realize that decisions made by parents are better than decisions enforced through programs designed by bureaucrats in Ottawa and funded by those parents' taxes.
I call on the House to design and implement new priorities; priorities that will expand choices for families rather than constrict them; priorities that will provide social and economic security for families, both for parents and their children; priorities that will provide economic social security for future generations; priorities that will empower families to realize their dreams and allow them to become a vibrant part of the future success of this great land of ours.