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7 Can. Tax J. 388 (1959)
The Nova Scotia Hospital (Sales) Tax: I. Development and Structure

handle is hein.journals/cdntj7 and id is 398 raw text is: 






The Nova Scotia Hospital (Sales) Tax


I. Development and Structure


John F. Due*


The Nova Scotia Hospital Tax, which became effective January 1, 1959,
was the first new provincial sales tax since 1950, the year of introduction
of both the New Brunswick and Newfoundland levies. With Nova Scotia
in the fold, there are only four provinces, Ontario, Manitoba, Alberta, and
Prince Edward Island, which do not use this type of tax. As a supplement
to the 1952-53 study by the author of the five provincial sales taxes then
in operation,1 a similar study of the Nova Scotia tax was made in June
of 1959 in the course of a three weeks stay in the province.2 The results
are presented in three parts in successive issues of the Journal.


Development of the Tax
   Consideration of the use of a sales
tax in Nova Scotia dates back for a
decade. In the period around 1950,
the province was an active proponent
in Dominion-Provincial tax confer-
ences on a constitutional amendment
to permit the provinces to levy a sales
tax in the indirect form, that is, with
legal liability for payment of the tax
resting solely on the retailer. Such an
amendment was under serious con-
sideration by the provinces late in
1950, and that w i n t e r Premier
MacDonald announced plans for a
sales tax to meet an expected deficit,
provided that the pending amendment
became effective. But the plans for


an amendment were abandoned as a
result of the opposition of Quebec,
and Premier MacDonald, in his June,
1951 Budget Message, indicated that
he had given up plans for a sales tax,
for the reason that the federal sales
tax had been increased from 8 to 10
per cent. Other taxes were increased,
and interest in a sales tax declined.
  The next serious discussion of sales
taxation arose in connection with the
city of Halifax rather than the province.
In 1957 a Commission appointed to
study the city's tax problem recom-
mended the establishment of a 2 per
cent city sales tax as part of a program
to allow lower tax rates on commercial


  * Professor of Economics, University of
Illinois. The author wishes to express his indebt-
edness to the Canadian Tax Foundation for
making the study possible; to the Canadian
Retail Federation and its General Manager,
Mr. E. F. K. Nelson, for their assistance; to
Mr. T. A. Wood of Halifax for his help in
arranging appointments; to Mr. V. M. Knight,
Commissioner of Hospital Taxes; and to the
many other persons who spared the time to
discuss the problems arising with the tax and to
arrange appointments with other business firms.


  1 See Provincial Sales Taxes, Tax Paper No. 7
(Toronto: Canadian Tax Foundation, 1953).
  2 The study involved interviews with govern-
mental agencies, trade association officials, and
a sample of 107 business firms (about 1 per
cent of the total number of licensed firms),
located in Halifax, Dartmouth, Bridgewater,
Liverpool, Shelburne, Yarmouth, Kentville,
Windsor, Hantsport, Sydney, Glace Bay, and
Truro.

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