Title: Section
1Section 7 (b)
Understanding the Equalization Formula
2What is Equalization?
- A program of unconditional grants by the
federal government to make more equal the ability
of Canadas provinces to provide a basic level of
public services. - Is is essentially one of the principal means by
which the federal government contributes to
public services for Canadians in less affluent
provinces.
3Purpose of the Program
- The purpose of this program is to ensure that
provincial government have sufficient resources
to be able to provide their residents with
reasonably comparable levels of public services,
without having to resort to tax rates that are
higher than average.
4Purpose of the Program
- The primary objectives are thus
- To correct the imbalance between revenue-raising
capacity and expenditure responsibility. - To mitigate against tax competition among
provinces.
5Objectives of the Program
- The Royal Commission on the Economic Union and
Development Prospects for Canada (1985) once
commented that - An essential element of citizenship in the
Canadian federation must be relatively equal
access to basic government services, irrespective
of place of residence.
6Objectives of Equalization
- The Canadian Constitution now entrenches the
equalization payments - Parliament and the government of Canada are
committed to the principle of making equalization
payments to ensure that provincial governments
have sufficient revenues to provide reasonably
comparable levels of public service at reasonable
comparable levels of taxation. - (Subsection 36(2) of The Constitution Act,
1982)
7Primary Objective Revenue-Raising Capacity
- After Equalization payments are made, no province
should have a revenue-raising capacity below a
specified standard. - This does not mean, however, that the revenue
raising capacities of all provinces should be the
same.
8Secondary Objectives
- The Department of Finance has established a
number of other secondary objectives for the
program - Sustainability implies that if the program is
to remain financially viable, its payout growth
needs to be prudent. - Stability implies that payouts to provinces
needs to be free of large and destabilizing
fluctuations. - Accountability Finance is accountable to
Parliament for this program and the federal
government has some responsibility to consult
meaningfully with provinces.
9A Bit of History
- Over the last 25 years, the program has expanded
as more provincial revenue sources were added,
such as various sales taxes, resources royalties
and property taxes. - The Equalization program is set out in the
Federal-Provincial Fiscal Arrangements Act, which
is traditionally reviewed and renewed by
parliament every five years. - Current legislation expires March 31, 2004.
10What is Equalization?
- The Equalization program measures how well
provinces can raise revenues relative to one
another. - Provinces with an above-average revenue raising
capacity are designated have provinces
currently Alberta and Ontario. - Those provinces with lower capacity are
designated have not provinces.
11What is Equalization?
- Equalization payments are unconditional grants
-- receiving provinces are free to spend the
funds on public services according to their own
priorities. - The current program, first formally initiated in
1957, is designed to equalize fiscal capacity
across 34 different tax bases (called the
representative tax system, RTS).
12The Equalization Process
- The detailed process of determining Equalization
entitlements for have-not provinces follows
essentially four fundamental steps - Determining Fiscal Capacity
- Establishing the Equalization Standard.
- Measuring Equalization Entitlements.
- Allowing for Special Provisions in the Formula.
13Fiscal Capacity (step 1)
- Fiscal capacity is a measure of the ability of a
jurisdiction to finance its own government
services. - Measuring fiscal capacity is measured by using a
standardized tax system known as the
representative tax system (RTS).
14Fiscal Capacity (step 1)
- The RTS estimates each provinces ability to
raise revenues from over 30 different revenue
sources that are called tax bases. - Fiscal Capacity is a hypothetical number that
measures how much a province could raise if it
applied national average tax rates on commonly
defined tax bases.
15Fiscal Capacity (step 1)
- The measurements are made on a per capita basis
to allow comparisons among provinces with
different populations. - The most important tax bases, on a percentage
basis, are personal income taxes, consumption
taxes, and property taxes.
16Fiscal Capacity (step 1)
- (Equalization Revenue Sources 2000-01)
Gaming Revenue 3
Other 6
Resource Revenue 8
Income Taxes 26
Business Taxes 15
Property Taxes 18
Consumption Taxes 23
17Equalization Standard (step 2)
- Once provincial per capita fiscal capacity has
been calculated, the next step is to establish a
benchmark against which each provinces fiscal
capacity can be compared. - The Standard measures the average per capita
fiscal capacity of the five middle income
provinces Quebec, Ontario, Manitoba,
Saskatchewan and B.C.
18Equalization Standard (step 2)
- This Standard amount represents the revenues that
would be available, on average, to the
provinces if they had a common tax system which
they applied in a common manner. - For 2002-03, Equalization ensured that all
provinces had access to revenues of at least
5,863 per resident to fund public services.
19Equalization Standard (step 2)
20Equalization Entitlements (step 3)
- The federal government pays Equalization to
provinces whose fiscal capacity is below the
five-province standard. - Entitlement paid to each province is equal to the
difference between the per capita revenue a
provinces could raise on its own and the per
capita fiscal capacity of the standard.
21Equalization Entitlements (step 3)
- The total amount paid to a province is then
determined by taking its per capita entitlement
and multiplying that by its population. - Equalization is not a fixed entitlement, however,
and responds to all changes in population and
fiscal capacity.
22Equalization Entitlements (step 3)
- Calculation adjustments are made twice a year in
October and February, with all open fiscal years
(those not yet finalized) re-calculated at the
same time. - The final equalization adjustment is made 30
months after the end of the fiscal year, once the
data used is finalized.
23Equalization Entitlements (step 3)
24 Equalization Entitlements (step 3)
25 Equalization Entitlements (step 3)
- Historically, Saskatchewan receives the lowest
per capita Equalization of the receiving
provinces. - The graph on the next slide provides an
illustration of the volatility over a 10-year
period.
26 Equalization Entitlements (step 3)
27 Equalization Entitlements (step 3)
- These entitlements differ from annual Entitlement
receipts due to prior-year adjustments and the
impact of the floor and ceiling provisions
(discussed later).
28 Newfoundland Tobacco Tax Example
29 Tobacco Tax Example (contd)
30Special Provisions (step 4)
- Examples of some basic special provisions
- A Floor provision.
- A Ceiling provision.
- The Offshore Accords.
31Special Provisions (step 4)
- Equalization payments are also subject to floor
and ceiling provisions. - The Floor protects individual provinces against
any large year-to-year declines in its payments. - The Ceiling sets out a maximum amount each year
for total payments, to protect the federal
government from growth beyond GDP. -
32Special Provisions (step 4)
- The Floor limits the amount by which a
provinces entitlement can decline from one year
to the next. - The calculation is as follows
- The floor limits year-over-year declines in
each provinces per capita entitlement to no more
than 1.6 of the standard.
33Special Provisions (step 4)
- For example, entitlements for this coming
2003-04 fiscal year can not decline by more than
94.78 per capita since the standard was 5,924.
- Note Saskatchewan has qualified most often for
floor payments since its entitlements often vary
considerably due to volatility in the prices of
natural resources.
34Special Provisions (step 4)
- The Ceiling sets an upper limit on the growth
of total Equalization payments to the provinces.
- This maximum payment or limit increases each year
in line with the growth in the economy.
35Special Provisions (step 4)
- In subsequent years, the ceiling continues to
grow with the economy that is, by the rate of
growth of nominal GDP. - When the program produces entitlements that
exceed the ceiling limit, the program is reduced
to the ceiling limit by reducing each provinces
entitlement by the same per capita amount.
36Special Provisions (step 4)
- The Offshore Accords were established because
ownership of offshore resources is not as clear
as natural resources. - The accords only deal with Newfoundland and Nova
Scotia and contain provisions that offset the
impact on Equalization payments on offshore
resource development, much like the generic
solution. - These provisions provide time-limited measures to
mitigate Equalization reductions.
37Special Provisions (step 4)
- These Offshore Accords operate outside of the
Equalization program. - Equalization is calculated as if the Accord
provision did not exist and payments are made on
that basis. - Equalization is then recalculated using the
special Accord provision and the difference
between the two calculations is transferred to
Nova Scotia and Newfoundland.
38Questions on Equalization?