Asian Journal

Investing in the middle class to grow Canada’s economy

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Ottawa: Since 2015, hard-working Canadians have proven what has long been understood: a strong economy starts with a strong middle class.

Nearly four years ago, Canadians chose a plan to invest in the middle class and offer real help to people working hard to join it.

Investing in the middle class means investing in people—with more help for those who need it, and less for those who don’t. It means building a better Canada—a stronger, more connected country—and it means better opportunit­ies for people today, and the promise of a better future, even in a world of constant change.

The Government’s investment­s in the middle class are paying off. Canada’s economy is strong and growing, more Canadians are working, and families have more money to save or spend each month.

Building on this momentum, Finance Minister Bill Morneau tabled Budget 2019—Investing in the Middle Class. With Budget 2019, the Government is continuing to invest to grow the economy for the long term, in a fiscally responsibl­e way—ensuring that Canada’s federal debt-to-gdp ratio continues on a steady downward track.

In Budget 2019, the Government of Canada proposes to:

• Make homeowners­hip more affordable for first-time buyers by implementi­ng a Firsttime Home Buyer Incentive, a shared equity mortgage program that would reduce the mortgage payments required to own a home; and by providing greater access to their Registered Retirement Savings Plan savings to buy a home.

• Help workers gain new skills with the creation of the new Canada Training Benefit, a benefit that will give workers money to help pay for training, provide income support during training, and, with the cooperatio­n of the provinces and territorie­s, offer job protection so that workers can take the time they need to keep their skills relevant and in-demand. • Prepare young Canadians for good jobs by helping make education more affordable through lowered interest rates on Canada

Student Loans, making the six-month grace period interest-free after a student loan borrower leaves school, and creating up to 84,000 new student work placements per year by 2023-24.

• Help Canadians with the cost of prescripti­on drugs by taking steps towards a national pharmacare plan, starting with creating a new Canadian Drug Agency that could lower Canadians’ drug costs by as much as $3 billion per year, developing a national formulary for prescripti­on drugs, and a national strategy for high-cost drugs for rare diseases.

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