Being in Nova Scotia where we have soon to be the highest sales tax in the country and currently the 2nd highest income tax structure a movement like this can gain a lot of traction. Nowhere does the OP suggest that government services should be totally gutted or that taxes even be reduced (although I thnk they should be; not just in Nova Scotia but in other provinces and federally as well).
Being in Nova Scotia where we have soon to be the highest sales tax in the country and currently the 2nd highest income tax structure a movement like this can gain a lot of traction. Nowhere does the OP suggest that government services should be totally gutted or that taxes even be reduced (although I thnk they should be; not just in Nova Scotia but in other provinces and federally as well).
" In this situation, it will be irresponsible in the extreme to even talk of cutting taxes."
I find it rather ironic that you are so in favour of taxes and yet taxes adversely affect the people who are on the low end of the income scale and yet when it comes to health care these are the people you seem most concerned out. LOL
Has anybody asked why they are giving you (what some here think is an honor) to be one the highest tax Provinces in the Commonwealth. What will the citizen gain from this tax? What do some want to do with this money?
Has anybody asked why they are giving you (what some here think is an honor) to be one the highest tax Provinces in the Commonwealth. What will the citizen gain from this tax? What do some want to do with this money?
If I am reading this right, it pertains solely to the opinion of one poster. I personally feel I'm more qualified to speak to this issue being a member of the moderate income category, taxes are NOT an honour and they are NOT a solution to helping our country of a recession. Gov'ts are not particularly competent when it comes to spending money. Unemployment is the single biggest financial problem we have in this country and the way to cure that is to have a greater demand for goods and services. Who demands these good and services? The people of the country when they have the money in their pockets them. How is taking money out of their pockets going to put them in position to fill this demand?
If I am reading this right, it pertains solely to the opinion of one poster. I personally feel I'm more qualified to speak to this issue being a member of the moderate income category, taxes are NOT an honour and they are NOT a solution to helping our country of a recession. Gov'ts are not particularly competent when it comes to spending money. Unemployment is the single biggest financial problem we have in this country and the way to cure that is to have a greater demand for goods and services. Who demands these good and services? The people of the country when they have the money in their pockets them. How is taking money out of their pockets going to put them in position to fill this demand?
I wonder, if the increased tax structure due to the stability in the base line income of every household in NS would generate enough returned tax money to cover the yearly deficit we acquire due to trying to fund the 2.3 billion in the first place. Instead of the majority of that funding going to pay for the government services needed to operate the fund coupled with the cost of the many non government services that this article doesn't list.
It's called infrastructure. Roads, telecomm, energy, rail, ports, drinking water, waste water, waste disposal, are being invested in heavily using P3 partnerships and the ActionPlan which is foreign investment based on pre-paid resource term leases.One thing that always floats around in the back of my mind is that we need to find a way to reduce production/waste and inflation.