As expected, the recent 2015 federal budget
had the general feel of an election budget, with
a small surplus and a smattering of initiatives to
satisfy various voting groups. As Liberal leader
Justin Trudeau noted in the House of Commons,
“The budget is a political document produced
to that end. It is a vision for a Conservative election
campaign.”
While many, including Trudeau, have tried to paint
the Conservatives as radical, the 2015 budget
actually points to a different conclusion. When it comes
to the size and scope of the federal government, it’s
hard to distinguish the 2015/16 Conservatives from the
2005/06 Liberals.
Let’s start with the most important measure of the size of
government: spending as a share of the economy. Federal
program spending (total spending minus interest payments
on the federal debt) as a share of the economy
(GDP) was 12.6 percent in 2005/06, the last year the Liberals
were in office. On this measure, the federal government
grew in the first three years under the Conservatives
(2006/07 to 2008/09) before skyrocketing during
the recession.
Federal program spending now stands at 12.9 percent of
GDP with the Conservatives planning to increase it to 13.2
percent this year (2015/16). Simply put, the Conservatives
have increased the size of the federal government,
and if re-elected, plan to keep the federal government
larger than the previous Liberal government.
Conservatives’ Economic
Vision for Canada is
Hardly conservative
Niels Veldhuis and Charles Lammam
FRASER
INSTITUTE RECENT COLUMNS APPEARED IN
THE FINANCIAL POST
Summer 2015 | 21
Moreover, when provincial and local governments are
added, total government spending in Canada is currently
about 40 percent of GDP.
In a recent book, Measuring
Government in the 21st Century, Lakehead University
Professor Livio Di Matteo examines a wide range of international
data to measure how the size of government
affects economic growth and social outcomes. Di Matteo
finds that economic growth is maximized when total government
spending is at approximately 26 percent of GDP,
and for social outcomes there is little additional benefit
once government reaches 30 to 35 percent of GDP.
A truly conservative vision for the federal government
would recognize that it is in the best interests of Canada’s
economic and social health to reduce the size of government—not
increase it.
A deeper look at the composition of federal spending
tells a similar tale. There has been little change in the
composition of federal program spending since 2005/06
across the three major categories (direct federal government
spending, transfers to persons, and transfers
to government). Today, the federal government’s direct
spending is a little lower as a portion of the total while
transfers to Canadian families and other levels of government
are a little higher.
Specifically, direct federal spending decreased from 47
to 44 percent of the total; major transfers to individuals
and families increased from 30 to 31 percent of the
total; and major transfers to other levels of government
increased from 23 to 25 percent of the total. Again, when
we consider the composition of federal spending, there’s
only a marginal difference between the 2005/06 Liberals
and the 2015/16 Conservatives.
The one big difference between 2005/06 and 2015/16 is
on the revenue side. Federal revenues as a share of the
economy are now smaller (14.5 percent) than in 2005/06
(15.9 percent). The main reason for this decline is the
Conservatives’ two-point reduction in the GST and, to a
lesser extent, the general business tax reduction from 21
percent to 15 percent (an extension of the Liberals’ reduction
from 28 percent).
The Conservatives were able to reduce taxes and increase
the size of the federal government (program spending as
a share of GDP) for two reasons. First, interest payments
on the federal debt decreased due to substantially lower
interest rates. Second, the Liberals consistently overtaxed
Canadians by running significant surpluses. The
distinguishing difference between the Conservatives and
Liberals is that the Conservatives ended the practice of
over-taxing.
But as for further tax reductions, the Conservatives’ 2015
budget hardly lives up to its own name: Low-Tax Plan for
Jobs, Growth and Security. The budget is actually set to
increase the federal tax burden.
There is little question that Canada would benefit from a
more focused, smaller federal government, which would
allow for personal income tax rate reductions that lead
to positive economic results by providing better incentives
for skilled, educated, and hard-working middleincome
Canadians.
Former Prime Minister Paul Martin and current Prime
Minister Stephen Harper seem to agree on that point.
Paul Martin highlighted it in 2005 when he said, “Lower
personal taxes would also provide greater rewards and
incentives for middle-and high-income Canadians to
work, save, and invest.” Prime Minister Stephen Harper
made much the same point in 2007 when he said, “Canada
needs lower personal income tax rates to encourage
more Canadians to realize their full potential.”
Regardless of the rhetoric surrounding the federal budget,
it seems that the Liberals and Conservatives have
more in common than they like to admit.
NIELS VELDHUIS CHARLES LAMMAM
Niels Veldhuis is President and Charles Lammam is
Director of Fiscal Studies at the Fraser Institute
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