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May 5, 2008

Three-Card McGuinty

You have to tip your hat to Dalton McGuinty. Another premier, on discovering that his province was about to qualify for payments under the federal equalization program, might have seized the occasion to demand that the program be enriched. But as the premier of the largest province in Canada, McGuinty no doubt feels an obligation to rise above such petty concerns. Surely statesmanship, then, explains his demand that the program from which Ontario may soon be drawing $1-billion and change should be radically curtailed -- or in McGuinty's words, to "revisit the perverse dimensions of the existing fiscal network that ties us to the rest of the country.

Statesmanship, or confusion. Perhaps aware that his adversaries would blame Ontario's impending descent into "have-not" status on his government's economic policies, McGuinty tried to change the subject by attacking the feds, dusting off his favourite complaint from yesteryear, the so-called $20-billion gap: the amount by which federal tax revenues collected in Ontario exceed federal spending in Ontario. The result was utter intellectual chaos, the premier shuffling numbers and definitions back and forth like a cardsharp at three-card monte, with casual disregard for logic, truth, or basic mathematics....

To McGuinty, there is something "perverse" in the proposition "that somehow we are in need, while at the same time we're sending $20 billion to the rest of the country." It's one thing, he said, "to send $20 billion to the rest of the country in good times, but in periods of economic challenge, this is nonsense. We can't afford to do that." The impending arrival of a billion-plus in federal equalization payments, far from redressing this imbalance, only seemed to exacerbate McGuinty's anger. "It's crazy," he told reporters. "We will be paying ourselves equalization with our own money." And one more time, for emphasis: "We have ended up with the possibility here where . . . were we to become a recipient (of equalization), we would rescue ourselves with our own money. That's how perverse and nonsensical this financial arrangement is."

Where. Does. One. Begin.

Let's start with the $20-billion gap. Not so long ago, you'll recall, it was the "$23-billion gap." That it could have shrunk $3-billion since then may indicate that this much-cited statistic has nothing to do with any entrenched unfairness to Ontario and everything to do with changing economic conditions. And even the revised figure is out of date. it's based on data from 2005 -- not 2010, the year Ontario is projected to start drawing equalization. By then, the gap is likely to be considerably smaller, if it has not disappeared altogether.

Why's that? Consider the actual reasons for that fabled gap. The biggest part of it is simply a result of the federal government being in surplus: the amount by which federal revenues exceed federal spending, not just in Ontario, but across the country. In 2005-06, the whole country experienced a "gap" on the order of $13-billion, of which Ontario's share would be roughly $5-billion.

Billions more is accounted for by the simple fact that incomes are higher, on average, in Ontario than in the rest of Canada. It isn't unfairness that explains why Ottawa collects more tax revenues per capita in Ontario than in most other provinces: it's arithmetic, especially under a progressive tax system, where higher average incomes are taxed at higher rates.

Sorry, did I say incomes in Ontario are higher than average? I meant they were -- 2005 was the last year that Ontario's per capita GDP exceeded the national average. By 2010, they are projected to be 5% below the average. So the situation the premier rails against -- still sending $20-billion to the rest of Canada, even as a have-not province -- does not exist now, and almost certainly will not then.

Now, even McGuinty, if pressed, would not claim that the whole gap is the product of institutional bias against Ontario. At most, you could find about $2- or $3-billion, largely arising from lower-than-average per capita federal transfers for health and social programs, a legacy of past efforts to reduce the federal deficit. But here's the thing: the feds have already moved to raise Ontario back to the national average, as of the 2007 budget.

And here's another thing: at the time, McGuinty had no problem with "paying ourselves with our own money." The higher federal transfers he had been demanding were, after all, paid for largely by Ontario taxpayers, just as surely as its equalization payments would be. That may be wasteful -- why not just leave the money in Ontario taxpayers' pockets, rather than processing it through two levels of government -- but it's hardly unusual.

It does suggest, however, some confusion between "Ontario," meaning Ontario's taxpayers, and "Ontario," meaning the Ontario government -- a confusion McGuinty routinely exploits. It isn't the Ontario government that "sends" $20-billion to the rest of the country. If anyone, it's Ontario's taxpayers. Yet when it is suggested that Ontario might improve its economic performance -- and avoid the stigma of have-not status -- by cutting taxes, notably the province's nation-leading corporate tax rates, McGuinty pleads poverty. "Some of my colleagues are in a position to reduce their corporate income taxes because we sent them 20 billion Ontario dollars," he explained. "If we could keep a few more of our dollars, we might be able to entertain that kind of a conversation."

You follow? Our taxpayers are paying so much in federal tax that we can't afford to cut their provincial taxes. We can't cut taxes, because taxes are so high. Talk about perverse.

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11 Comments

Anonymous Budweisenheimer:

Half of all respondents say McGuinty tastes great; half of all respondents say he's less filling.

5/05/2008  
Anonymous Anonymous:

Stop. Doing. That.

I. Hate. It.

5/05/2008  
Blogger Bob Crooks:

That is a great article. It highlights the stupidity of the equalization system and even more so the stupidity of a province electing a Premier who has proven he can't understand it.

5/05/2008  
Anonymous Gord Tulk:

With the falling away (falling down?) of Ontario from the "haves", the folly that is the constitutionally enshrined equalization program is laid bare. The emperor will soon be seen nude.

While almost all of the media have focussed on the predicament Ontario is in, they have ignored the real disaster that looms ahead. The only provinces now and into the forseeable future that will be net donors to equalization are the large oil and gas (and potash and other minerals) producing provinces - BC, AB, SK, and NL. Some of them will be huge per capita contributors - AB, SK and NL. AB pays approx 15 BB per year or 5000 per cap in after-tax dollars - 20000 per family of four. Per Year. As tarsands production continues to ramp up along with feverish development of the Bakken sands and heavy oil in SK and the Orphan Basin (16 billion BBLs according to some) in NL these numbers will become even larger.

It will become painfully obvious to all what has been obvious to many in AB for some time now - Equalization is a confiscatory federal tax on non-renewable resource revenues - an area that is supposed to lie outside of the federal gov'ts juristiction. (MB and QC (and NL) all hide their renewable hydro revenues from equalization taxation by selling the power to it domestic clients for significantly below open-market rates.)

This situation will not be permitted to stand by the "haves" for very long. Ontario will not be pleased if the formula is yet again rejigged in an ad hoc manner. And telling QC and Mb that they have include hydro at market rates will be difficult to say the least. This will soon be the biggest constitutional crisis facing the country since Meech.

This is PET's true legacy.

5/06/2008  
Anonymous M. GrĂ©goire:

Regarding Mr. McGuinty's "gap", isn't a major part of it interest payments that the federal government makes on the national debt? I believe they amounted to around $30B in 2007, and that would be money received from Canadian (and Ontarian) taxpayers that goes to neither programme spending nor transfers to the provinces.

5/06/2008  
Anonymous Paul McKeever:

Good article Andrew, although I think McGuinty's argument now is a lot better than it was a few months ago. From what I can decipher, he's now implicitly asking the feds to cut taxes, and I cannot complain about that...except to say that it's not his job to complain to the feds.

I did a video explaining the constitutionality (etc) of equalization a few months back, in case you, or one of your readers, is interested: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rWQUmvJvIWI

5/06/2008  
Anonymous Heidi B:

I have an idea, which I posted on an earlier CBC comment web site on this same topic...
Equilization payments exist ( I believe ) so that the federal government can guarantee an equal standard of service from province to province in matters such as health and education. Provinces administer these programs, but not all provinces have sufficient revenue to guarantee the same standards. Therefore the federal government takes money from all the provinces and redistributes it so each province has enough to guarantee services regardless of income.
What if the federal government collected money from taxpayers to pay for those matters that affect the nation as a whole such as health/education/defence and then administered the money at a federal level?
Let the provinces continue to collect revenue from natural resource leases, instead of taxing residents, and manage those resources at a provincial level.
I know it would require constitutional change but I think it would make more sense and be more cost effective.

5/06/2008  
Anonymous Ty:

What if the federal government collected money from taxpayers to pay for those matters that affect the nation as a whole such as health/education/defence and then administered the money at a federal level?
It makes total sense, which means, because this is Canada, it will never happen. It would take away the Premiers' power to take up their flags and whine money away from the Federal government to cover their mistakes.

5/07/2008  
Anonymous Gord Tulk:

Nationalizing health and education seems like a horrible idea to me - I think we should be deregulating them just like we have telecoms and airlines = better service/quality for less$$$.

5/08/2008  
Anonymous Anonymous:

It's good to see a national journalist that understands the Ontario goverment doesn't actually make equilization payments to other provinces. I wish others knew the difference.

5/11/2008  
Blogger Joan Tintor:

Of course, it's because of the changes Harper implemented (after the premiers couldn't agree amongst themselves, natch) such as including 50% of resource revenues, that Ontario taxpayers are poised to take less of a "hit" under equalization. i.e. become "have not."

Fortunately for Premier Pinocchio, most people don't understand enough about equalization to appreciate this.

The uptside is that thanks to all this, any federal ambitions McGuinty may have had are as dead as Jacob Marley.

5/13/2008  

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