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26 Tax Memo 1 (1961)

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TAX


No.  26


MEMO


February,   1961


FEDERAL BUDGET OUTLOOK


   Ten months ago the Minister of Finance
presented the Canadian people with his first
balanced budget in four years. However,
the downward  drift in the economic indi-
cators forced him to issue a revision last
December  and  to announce that  Canada
faced its fourth consecutive deficit year. In
this Tax Memo  the Canadian Tax Founda-
tion takes its customary pre-budget look at
the coming fiscal year to determine what are
the Minister's prospects for pushing the
genie of recurring deficits back into the
bottle.
   The Foundation must, of course, base its
predictions on the assumption that tax rates
will remain unchanged. It cannot second-
guess the government on questions of policy.
All it seeks to do in this venture into crystal-
ball gazing is to assess how government
revenues will be affected, given a specified
rate of economic  growth  or retardation.
With  the federal government currently tak-
ing about 17% of the gross national product,
it is important for other governments and
business to know   what Ottawa's  future
demands  will be on the national output.
   For  the current fiscal year we see a
slightly higher deficit than the Minister pre-
dicted in his supplementary budget, as there
appears to be a continuing deterioration in
commodity   tax receipts. We think  final
revenues will approach  $5.7 billion and
expenditures will be around $6 billion, leav-
ing a deficit of more than $.3 billion. These
figures are exclusive of Old Age Security
revenues and expenditures which will be in
balance close to $.6 billion.


-- 1961


   For the 1961-62 fiscal year the outlook
is for an even larger deficit. Although we
are assuming that the gross national product
will grow  in  1961 at  about the  same
moderate rate as it did in 1960, we foresee
a slight drop in total revenue owing to the
fact that 1961-62 will be a trough year for
corporation tax receipts, which tend to run
in two or three year cycles. The decline of
$171 million in corporation tax receipts is
expected to more than offset gains of about
$52 million from personal income tax and
$49 million from the consumption taxes. As
a result revenues are likely to come about
half-way between $5.6 and $5.7 billion. On
the expenditure side, the Main Estimates
tabled in January indicate that proposed
expenditures have already broken the $6
billion barrier and when  the  inevitable
supplementary estimates are added, we can-
not see how the Minister can avoid a deficit
at least double the one predicted for this
year. If the amount exceeds $610 million, it
will set a record for peace-time.
   Indications are that the government's
non-budgetary  cash  requirements  may
exceed its non-budgetary income next year,
so that it will have to meet both its budget
deficit and possibly another $100 million or
so of non-budgetary needs by means of new
borrowing or by reducing its cash balances.
What   effect this will have on the bond
market depends on a number of factors, not
the least being the extent to which  the
government uses long term issues.
   In the following pages a more detailed
analysis is presented.


               Additional copies of the Memo may be obtained at a price of 15¢.

CANADIAN                   TAX         FOUNDATION

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