With B.C.ѻýs operating deficit heading past the $13 billion mark due to COVID-19, more than four out of five B.C. residents are concerned that tax increases and service cuts are coming, according to a new survey from the Business Council of B.C.
The business group commissioned a public opinion survey from Ipsos Public Affairs to test support for its ѻýѻý recovery plan, to support businesses hit hardest by the pandemic and public health measures to contain it. The plan includes placing a time limit on municipal project approvals and restructuring B.C.ѻýs sales tax to give the private sector a better chance to invest and recover.
The survey was conducted shortly after Premier John Horgan won a majority mandate in the Oct. 24 election. It found 81 per cent agreement that the B.C. government should do more to support businesses, and 79 per cent are concerned that the NDPѻýs election promises are going to lead to higher taxes or debt.
Concern about overspending is found across B.C. regions and age groups
ѻý Tom Fletcher (@tomfletcherbc)
Business council CEO Greg DѻýAvignon said a surprising result of the survey is the high level of concern among younger people as well as older people who have lived through Canadaѻýs struggles with debt and deficits before.
ѻýTheyѻýre seeing this money fly around all over the place,ѻý DѻýAvignon said in an interview with Black Press Media Dec. 1. ѻýEveryone has a story about getting money they didnѻýt think they deserve. They know itѻýs coming from somewhere, and they know theyѻýre going to have to pay it back at some point.ѻý
Horganѻýs campaign promise of $1,000 payments to most B.C. households has no requirement to show lost income. It comes on top of federal relief spending that has been shown to have greatly exceeded income losses across Canada, with more deficit spending promised this week by federal Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland.
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A by CIBC found Canadians are saving money at unprecedented rates, due to what economists describe as poorly targeted and excessive federal relief payments that many people have banked because they didnѻýt need the money.
ѻýCOVID-19 has triggered the largest cash accumulation in recorded history,ѻý the bankѻýs economists found.
And a recent report by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development showed household incomes in Canada rose 11 per cent in the second quarter of the fiscal year, despite a sharp contraction in the economy. The OECD calculated that Canadian labour income fell by more than $100 billion in the second quarter, but government transfers grew by $225 billion in the same period, leaving Canada with the largest deficit increase of any developed country.
ѻýWith a new government in place and prospects of vaccines being available in 2021, now is the time to be thinking about how to get B.C. businesses back on their feet, how to recoup the 100,000 full-time jobs lost in the last year, and how to reinvigorate the private sector, which will drive the necessary government revenues to provide essential supports and address mounting public debt,ѻý BCBC president Greg DѻýAvignon said.
tfletcher@blackpress.ca
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