Trudeau has long list of 'top priorities' for economic ministers - Action News
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Politics

Trudeau has long list of 'top priorities' for economic ministers

Finance Minister Bill Morneau is being asked to help phase out fossil fuel subsidies, boost the Canada Pension Plan, and reshape the country's tax and benefits system for families. Those are just some of the 27 "top priorities" the prime minister has given Morneau.

Finance minister's 27 'top priorities,' include boosting CPP and keeping debt-to-GDP levels in check

Canada's new finance minister

9 years ago
Duration 5:32
Bill Morneau outlines priorities as he steps into 1 of the highest profile jobs in cabinet

Finance Minister Bill Morneau is being asked by his boss to help phaseout fossil fuel subsidies, work with the provinces to boost the Canada Pension Plan, and reshape the country's tax and benefits system for families.

Those arejust some ofthe 27 "toppriorities," outlined in Morneau'smandate letter from his boss, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.

A lot of responsibilityfor a rookie MP albeit one who is a seasoned veteran in financial circles.

Also, none of the items on the long listshould come as a surprise to Morneau, or any of his cabinet colleagues, as they are drawn from the campaign promises made by the Liberals in the recent election.

Some items can be dispatched relatively quickly, including repealing the Federal Balanced Budget Act, the law passed just months agoby the former Conservative government after it tabled its first balanced budget in sixyears.

The Liberals acknowledged in the early days of their campaign that to accomplish their ambitious infrastructure spending plan will require runningthree "modest," budget deficits.Trudeau defined modest as "no more than $10billion."

The first listed priority forMorneauis,"balancing the budget by 2019/20 and continuing to reduce the federal debt-to-GDPratio throughout our mandate."

The second part of thattoppriorityto reduce the federal debt-to-GDP ratio every yearmay betrickier to accomplish.Recent fiscal forecasts, including this week's by the Parliamentary Budget Office, point to an ever-slowing economy.

With GDP forecastto grow by a modest twoper cent for 2016,the governmentcould run a deficit of up to nearly $40billion and still likely see the debt-to-GDP ratio shrink, but the numbers are getting tighter.

Another ambitious undertaking will be to fulfil the Liberal promise to increase retirement payments fromthe Canada Pension Plan a move that requires boosting payments into the system, as well as the co-operation of the provinces.

"Meet with your provincial and territorial colleagues at your earliest convenience," Trudeau's instructions to his finance minister include, "to begin a process to enhance the Canada Pension Plan."

Trudeau set out no timeline as to when he would like his minister to accomplish this task.

Quick tax cuts

On the otherhand, a middle-class taxcut will be among the first orders of business when Parliament opens with thenew government in early December.Reducingthe federal incometax bracket for those making between about $45,000to $89,000to 20.5 per cent from 22 per cent could be passed rapidly.

It's not clear as to when the government will fully unveil other promised measures, includingthe Canada Child Benefit,a new familyallowance system meant to combine and replace the money families with young children receive now through the Universal Child Care Benefit (UCCB), as well as the Canada Child Tax Benefit and National Child Benefit Supplement.

Implementing the change istasked to the Minister of Families, Children, and Social DevelopmentJean-YvesDuclos another rookie MP.

He will also undertake an overhaul of Old Age Security, which will see the guaranteed income supplement boosted by 10 per cent, the age of eligibility for OAS rolled back to 65 from 67, and the creation ofa new SeniorsPrice Index (SPI).

Help for seniors

During the election campaign, the Liberals cited a Statistics Canada study showing that goods typically purchased by seniors rise in price faster than the benchmark Consumer Price Index therefore future increases to OAS and GIS will be pegged tothe new SPI rather than the CPI.

While Morneau isstick-handling other changes to taxes, including eliminating incomesplitting for families, raising taxes for those making more than$200,000a year, and rolling backdeposit limits for tax-free savings accounts, the minister ofnational revenue has been asked to implement measures that are likely to be more popular.

Quebec MP Diane Lebouthillier was named to the national revenue portfolio in Justin Trudeau's first cabinet on Nov. 4, 2015. (Chris Wattie/Reuters)

Diane Lebouthillier, also newly elected to the House of Commons, will oversee changes to the Canada Revenue Agency.Those will include fulfilling a promise to "proactively contact Canadians who are entitled to, but are not receiving, taxbenefits," and to have the CRA offer to help lowincome Canadians withstraightforward taxes to fill out their forms.

Lebouthillier has also been handed the task of undoing a controversial move by the previous government.

She will oversee a review of the taxlaws governing the political activitiesof charities. The previous Conservative government launched audits of charitiesand revoked a number of organizations' charitable status because it deemed they spent too much of their resources and time on activities that were of a political nature.

"Allow charities to do their work on behalf of Canadians free from political harassment," Trudeauinstructs the newly-minted revenue minister.

In his letter to Lebouthillier, the prime ministerasks her to keep in mind that "charities make an important contribution to public debate and public policy."

Old deals - new government

The new government also inherits a basket of trade deals.

Although the negotiations for the trade deal with Europe formally ended more than a year ago, the deal has yet to be formally ratified on either side of the Atlantic.

International Trade Minister Chrystia Freeland is tasked with making trade deals negotiated by the former government work for the new one. (Chris Wattie/Reuters)

Trudeau seems ready to proceed with it as is, though, and has directed a number of his ministers to "develop strategies to implement," the trade deal including support those in agriculture and the autosector that are likely to be hurt by this deal, as well as "compensation for incremental cost increases for public drug plans arising from (the trade deal with Europe)."

When it comes to the Trans-Pacific Partnership, a deal concluded only two weeks before the election, Trudeau seems to be keeping his options open asking a number of ministers simply to "consult on Canada's potential participation in the (TPP)."