Conservatives’ budget steals from poor seniors

Feds use that stolen money to give to rich Canadians

To the editor:

The federal Conservative government’s latest budget gives the most to those who need it the least.

Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s priority is a $2-billion income-splitting plan and a massive increase to the limit for Tax Free Savings Accounts (TFSAs).

Both of these measures disproportionately benefit the rich instead of focusing that help on the middle class and those who are working hard to join it.

The vast majority of Canadian households – 85% – won’t get a dime from income-splitting, but they will be the ones left to pay for it.

Increasing the TFSA limit to $10,000 per year is also expensive and unfair.

The previous TFSA limit was helping the middle class save for retirement. However, most Canadians won’t benefit from the new higher limit. Canadians who are struggling don’t have an extra $10,000 to sock away each and every year.

The new TFSA limit will end up costing the government billions of dollars each year. A third of that cost will be borne by the provinces. And because TFSAs don’t count toward income-tested benefits, it will result in additional Old Age Security (OAS) payments for already wealthier seniors.

When asked about the long-term consequences of the new TFSA limit, Finance Minister Joe Oliver shrugged and said it was a problem for “Stephen Harper’s granddaughter to solve.”

These are the same Conservatives who, shortly after the last election, broke their promise and passed a law to increase the age of Old Age Security from 65 to 67. They falsely claimed they had to do it in order to keep the OAS program financially sustainable.

Increasing the age of OAS to 67 takes $32,000 away from each of Canada’s poorest and most vulnerable seniors. The government will be taking that money away at precisely the same time as the extra OAS payments for wealthier seniors start to really kick-in.

“The rich get richer and the poor get poorer” used to be an old adage. Under the federal Conservatives, it has become government policy.

Scott Brison, MP

Liberal Party Finance Critic

100 Mile House Free Press