“We need the CCPA to remind us that our dreams of a decent, egalitarian society are reasonable — indeed that with a little work, they are practical. And I love that practicality, that protection of the dream of the possible.”
— Naomi Klein
The federal budget will leave Canadians peniless in more ways than one. Read CCPA's news release in reaction to the budget here.
The following CCPA staff and research associates have posted their budget analysis on our blog (watch this space—we'll be posting links as they come in):
OTTAWA—All Canadians will pay the price for a federal budget that will result in significant job losses, weaker environmental protection, and unnecessary cuts to cherished public services, says the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives.
The CCPA says once the government’s three rounds of spending cuts are fully implemented, they will have resulted in a total of over 70,000 full-time job cuts (35,000 in the public sector and 37,000 in the private sector) and could raise the unemployment rate to 7.8%.
“This may be a 2012 budget but it’s got the 1930s written all over it,” says CCPA Senior Economist David Macdonald. “Federal austerity, combined with provincial austerity budgets, will create a fiscal drag on Canada’s economy.
“We are dismantling public programs and peeling back income supports such as Old Age Security without asking profitable corporations and the wealthy among us to do their part. We saw a similar story unfold in the 1930s and it didn’t end well. History is repeating itself.”
“After six Harper budgets, the corporate share of federal revenue has fallen to 1930s levels, millionaires are paying taxes at rates last seen in the 1920s, and the top 1% are capturing more of the gains from growth than at any time in history,” says CCPA Senior Economist Armine Yalnizyan.
“This budget fails to address the pressures of a middle class losing ground and young people struggling to find work,” says Yalnizyan. “It takes us backward in terms of retirement and environmental protection. With the exception of education and water needs for First Nations, it ignores the need to repair our aging infrastructure. The books will be balanced, but we’ll all pay the price.”
The CCPA is also critical of the lack of transparency within the budget, saying many planned job and service cuts weren’t spelled out today.
“Budgets are about making clear your plans to Canadians but, on many fronts, what this government tabled today was a hide-and-seek budget,” says Macdonald. “This budget raises more questions than it answers. You can’t get rid of the deficit this quickly without inflicting a lot of pain on Canadians. Whether it’s a hatchet job or death by a thousand tiny cuts, Canadians will pay a steep price—one this government could have avoided.”
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For more information contact Kerri-Anne Finn, CCPA Senior Communications Officer, at 613-563-1341 x306.
Saskatchewan Director Simon Enoch discusses the upcoming federal budget and the CCPA's Alternative Budget with Prairie Dog's Gregory Beatty. Read more here.
On March 15th, 2012, the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives held a press conference to release its flagship report—the Alternative Federal Budget 2012: A Budget for the Rest of Us.
This year's Alternative Budget puts forward a public investment plan that promotes a better quality of life for all Canadians, not just an elite few. It shows we can invest in public programs, job creation, and infrastructure to the benefit of all Canadians and still balance the books.
For more information, visit: http://www.policyalternatives.ca/AFB2012
Watch the video from the press conference below.
From corporate tax cuts to seniors benefits, everyone on Parliament Hill seems to think they know what should be in the budget. But can you do better?
What if you were finance minister for a day, how would your plan look? We've developed an interactive budget tool, based on our Alternative Federal Budget, where you can choose the programs you think are important. Watch out though, budget choices have consequences and with every program or taxation change comes an effect on the deficit and unemployment.
Click here to start building your budget.
Today, CCPA releases the Alternative Federal Budget 2012: A Budget for the Rest of Us. This year's AFB presents a public investment plan that promotes a better quality of life for all Canadians, not just an elite few. The AFB is designed to:
The full budget document, two page summary, and infographics are available in both English and French.
“We need the CCPA to remind us that our dreams of a decent, egalitarian society are reasonable — indeed that with a little work, they are practical. And I love that practicality, that protection of the dream of the possible.”
— Naomi Klein