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Finance committee That's in this bill before you, and that's right. Child benefits, like some other income benefits, work on a July to June schedule. In July 2018 it will be based on your 2017 income. Both the maximum benefits and the income thresholds will be indexed at 1.5%, which is the indexat
April 24th, 2018Committee meeting
Pierre Leblanc
Finance committee Over the fiscal planning period it's $5.6 billion nationally, so that seems consistent.
April 24th, 2018Committee meeting
Pierre Leblanc
Finance committee That's right, and just to confirm, that element of the proposal is not in this.
April 24th, 2018Committee meeting
Pierre Leblanc
Finance committee It would be fair to say that we can expect it in the next budget implementation act. We'd still like, in a lot of cases, people to fill out schedule 6. It could just mean they'll get the money sooner rather than later. In those cases where they don't right now under the current s
April 24th, 2018Committee meeting
Pierre Leblanc
Finance committee I think that's an important point. I'll just touch on them briefly, because others are better placed to discuss them than me. There are important initiatives in budget 2018 to provide more people support with tax filing, which is often an important gateway to receiving benefits,
April 24th, 2018Committee meeting
Pierre Leblanc
Finance committee You have more targeted funding, in particular to go on reserves to reach out to indigenous communities to encourage them to file, but also to make sure their children are registered for the Canada child benefit. Maybe I'll just leave it there, but that work is important, too.
April 24th, 2018Committee meeting
Pierre Leblanc
Finance committee That's right. I think that's a fair observation. I mean, another way to think about it relates to what was said on the issue in a previous round of questions. There are different decisions in relation to work. I think a lot of research has shown that a key decision is just whet
April 24th, 2018Committee meeting
Pierre Leblanc
Finance committee It's going to depend on the situation. You can think of situations where it will take $1,000 more earnings, that they will owe.... Let's take your assumption that they have exhausted their taxable..., so their income is above the sum of their non-refundable credits. Then they are
April 24th, 2018Committee meeting
Pierre Leblanc
Finance committee It can.
April 24th, 2018Committee meeting
Pierre Leblanc
Finance committee It can.
April 24th, 2018Committee meeting
Pierre Leblanc
Finance committee No, it can raise their effective marginal tax rate. I think in designing an income-tested benefit like this—especially something targeted at low-income workers—the idea is...there are trade-offs and you're trying to achieve the right balance. Research shows that individuals are p
April 24th, 2018Committee meeting
Pierre Leblanc
Finance committee The basic personal exemption in 2017 was $11,635. That person will be able to claim the Canada employment credit, so about $1,150, roughly; their CPP contributions; and their EI premiums. Probably they're not quite tax—it's pretty close. For a single parent, it would probably be
April 24th, 2018Committee meeting
Pierre Leblanc
Finance committee Yes, it does.
April 24th, 2018Committee meeting
Pierre Leblanc
Finance committee It does. When it's phasing in, it's reducing the marginal tax rate. When it's phasing out, it's increasing the marginal tax rate. When we design and enrich these programs, that's something we're always mindful of. That's one of the motivations for reducing the phase-out rate to
April 24th, 2018Committee meeting
Pierre Leblanc
Finance committee I think one of the interesting issues in comparing the earned income tax credit in the U.S. with the current working income tax benefit—which will become the Canada workers benefit—is that if you think of the delivery of child benefits in the U.S., a lot of it is done through the
April 24th, 2018Committee meeting
Pierre Leblanc