oh my! Harper Conservtive social engineering... who would have thought you'd go there! As for your stoopid comment purposely falsely stating what I said... I never said benefits should be the same across the board. What I did say, what I am saying, is the majority of Canadians should realize "some benefit"... they shouldn't be excluded as they are now under the Harper Conservative income-splitting proposal. Capeesh, Cappy?
you looked it up... where? Pardon me if I'm more inclined to believe the analysis coming from C.D. Howe... or the Broadbent Institute. You can't slag both of those since one is 'right-leaning', right?
WTF are you talking about??
There are four million two parent families in Canada. There will be a disparity in earnings in each family, therefore each of those families will benefit is some small way.
As for your contention that one parent would need to make $100,000 and the other nothing to realize the full $2000 benefit, THAT is ludicrous on the face of it, I don't care WHO came up with it.
Canadian income tax rates for Individuals - current and previous years
A person making $64,000 transfers $11,000 to a non-earning spouse, which just takes up her non-taxable $11,000 deduction, saving them the 22% tax he would have paid, or $2420.....then capped at $2000. Obviously this works at a lower earning than $64,000. I just couldn't be bothered doing all the math.
So much for the $100,000 BS.
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