Q&A: The wonky world of equalization payments - Action News
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Q&A: The wonky world of equalization payments

We asked University of Calgary economist Trevor Tombe to disentangle the facts from the politics and explain equalization policy.

Answers to commonly asked questions about how Canada's equalization program works

The federal government makes numerous types of transfer payments to the provinces, including equalization. But, unlike health and social transfers, not all provinces get equalization payments. (Sean Kilpatrick/Canadian Press)

Many people complain about equalization payments, but it takes a true policy wonkto fully explain how they work.

The equalization moniker might imply fairness, but some, particularly in Alberta, argue it's anything but fair. That perception might in part be a product of its complex nature and the politics associated with it.

Canada's equalization program was first introduced as a formal way to transfer funds from the federal government to the provinces in 1957 so that each could provide "reasonably" comparable services at "reasonably" comparable rates of taxation. The program was enshrined in the Constitution in 1982.

Here's a more recent history of federal transfers to the provinces, including equalization payments.

We asked University of Calgary economist TrevorTombe to disentangle the facts from the politics and explain equalization, as policy.

Here's how he answered our questions.

Q: What is the purpose of the equalization program?

A: Provinces differ in their ability to raise revenues. That is, ifall provinceshad exactlythe same tax rates, the Maritime provinceswould raise less revenue per person thanricher provinces like Alberta and British Columbia.

Theequalization programpartiallycompensates for this so all Canadians, regardless of where they live, have provincial governments capable of delivering needed services. To do this, aformula measures each province's "fiscal capacity,"and equalization paymentsthen bringpoor provinces up to some average level.

Importantly, equalization payments do not raise recipient provinces above the fiscal capacity ofnon-recipient provinces.

Q: What are the biggest myths about it?

A: Many see equalization as a transfer between provincial governments. It isn't.In Alberta, for example, someblame the equalization program for our $10-billion deficit. This misses two critical aspects of the program.

First, equalization payments are funded by the federal government from its own general revenue. There is no "equalization pot" into which rich provinces contribute.

Second, the equalization formula is based on a province'sabilityto raise revenue, not how much revenue it actually does raise. Alberta even today has the largest capacity to raise revenue in the country. Our deficit is a choice, not something caused by equalization.

Q: Is the stated purpose to provide "reasonably" comparable services at "reasonably"comparable ratesof taxation being achieved?

A: Equalization payments are unconditional. And different provinces will make different choices about how to allocate their spending.The program is not meant to require equivalent services be offered in all parts of the country, but to ensure provincial governments have theabilityto offer such services if they sochoose.

The transfers can often be substantial, worth over $2,500 per person in Prince Edward Island, for example. The program thereforedoes succeed in making more comparable the various provinces'ability to fund programs.

Q:There are complaints from politicians in provinces who are net contributors andnet recipients. How many times has the formula changed to respond to criticisms?

A: It's somewhat misleading to see some provinces as net contributors. No provincial government pays equalization to any other province. The program is funded through federal revenue, paid for through federal taxes on allCanadians.

To be sure, there are valid concerns and governments should haveproductive discussions on possiblechanges to theequalization formula. And pressure byprovinces can sometime lead to big changes,such as with the 2005 Atlantic Accord, which itselfalso sparkedfurther review and changes, most recently in 2009.

But to know how best to change the system, we must be focused on the equalization program itself. Too often discussion is hijacked by broader concerns over federal taxationand spending decisions.

Q: Does any other country with a similar political system have anything similar?

A: Federal transfers across regions are extremely common. Explicit programs exist in Australia, Belgium, China, France, India, German, Switzerland, the United Kingdomand many, many others. Even where explicit transfersare absent, many otherprograms implicitly transfer resources from rich to poor regions.

Regions with high incomes, such as Alberta, pay relatively more in federal personal and corporate income taxes, for example. We face the same rates as everywhere else, but more people hereearn highincomes. We also receive relatively less inbenefit payments, such as OAS or EI, since we have a younger population and [typically]havefewer unemployed people.

Measuring all such implicit transfers, the United States actually transfers more across regions than Canada at roughly 2.5 per centof its GDP, compared to Canada's 1.8 per cent. For Canada, equalization is only about one-quarter of these total transfers.