The nickel and diming of taxpayers
A new year in Ontario always comes with a few predictable staples: fireworks, champagne, a countdown to midnight, and petty increases to taxes and regulatory fees by the provincial government.
We’re not talking about bigpicture changes to income taxes. There is no significant change there. A two-child, single-income family earning $60,000 per year will have no change to their income taxes.
Rather, it’s a death-by-a-thousand-cuts of fee increases in just about every area of life. As surely as the ball drops in Times Square on Dec. 31, fees climb up each Jan. 1.
For example, licence plate fees have increased from $25 to $27, camping fees are up $0.25 for this year, and hunting and fishing licence fees are increasing by anywhere from 2.3 per cent to 4.5 per cent.
These are small increases taken individually, but the nickel-and-diming of taxpayers is especially stinging in a province like Ontario, where the cost of living has increased dramatically over the last 10 years. Consider increases to the cost of electricity and housing.
Government fees that increase automatically with the rate of inflation, like housing development fees, are referred to as “escalator taxes,” and politicians love them. They take a one-time reputational hit on a new fee or fee increase, but the fees will continue to increase each year without the need to bring a bill to Queen’s Park to approve the subsequent increases. This is significant for a provincial government that has been hammered on making everything in Ontario more expensive. The more tax and fee increases they can hide, the better off they are politically.
So it makes political sense for them to bring in even more new escalator fees, like a new escalator fee on quarries and the new fouryear escalator on certain farming fees.
New and existing escalator fees should be called out, because cabinet ministers should take responsibility for the decisions they make that increase costs on the people that elected them.
Accountability demands that when costs to the public go up, there is an elected official, rather than a faceless bureaucrat, associated with that increase. Because the more politicians can get away with these types of fee increases, the more they will rely on them. And ultimately, the more it will cost the taxpaying public.