Quote:
Originally Posted by Truenorth00
The goal is to contain the cost and cost growth of OAS. Rolling the age back to 67 is obviously difficult (politically) and will undoubtedly lead to the LPC campaigning on reversing that policy in 2029, just as they did in 2015.
If you're going to blow up something, blow it up in way that is irreversible. That's what Harper basically did with the GST cut. He created a situation that is very difficult and painful to reverse. I would argue they should take the hit and simply replace OAS with a more targeted program that is also cheaper. Boomers are going to be mad either way. Might as well get the most fiscal room for the wrath they'll face anyway.
They'll probably have to do this for every LPC initiative too, from CCB, to dental care to childcare. Whatever isn't getting eliminated will have to be scoped.
And if they want to offer tax cuts on top of everything, the social spending cuts will have to be 90s level severe. Or more.
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With childcare, I can already see a reasonable set of reforms:
1) means-testing the fee a bit, from $10 a day to something like $20-$25 a day (still cheap enough to make it worth it for parents to stay in the workforce), combined with a means test that keeps $10 a day for the poorest.
2) Enhanced tax credits for those who provide childcare for their children outside the universal subsidized program (ie. those who use private/unsubsidized daycares or who hire nannies, etc.) - if done correctly, this will actually save the government money as the cost savings from reduced demand for the public system offset the lost revenue from the credits.
The savings from these two reforms combined can be split; a portion of the savings can be reinvested into creating more spots in daycare centres, which when combined with the decrease in demand from reform #2, should help fix the atrocious waitlist problem (the program is practically useless in much of the country because of the long waitlist for subsidized spots), while the rest of the savings can go towards balancing the budget.
As for dental care, the program doesn't exist yet and a lot of it is still being decided. But I think the income thresholds are poorly set because they use household income entirely. IIRC it phases out at $90k a year. For a married couple, $90k household income is very low - you're barely making ends meet if that's your combined income as a multi-person household. But for single people, you're quite comfortable at $90k. In effect, the program is way too generous for single folks and way too stingy for married ones. They could lower the income thresholds for singles and redirect part of the savings to increasing the threshold for couples (while, again, using the rest of the savings to reduce the cost of the program overall).