Mike's Daily Comment
In the late 90’s there was an exodus of head offices from BC to Alberta, thanks to lower corporate tax rates, a business friendly government and reduced regulations. With the United Conservatives promising to cut corporate taxes and regulation by a third is it about to be “deja vu all over again.”
Faced with a choice between his NDP cousins in Alberta and grabbing power in BC through a coalition with the Green Party, which meant any cooperation or “social license” on the Trans Mountain Pipeline expansion had no chance. And neither did Rachel Notley and the NDP in the Alberta election.
Proponents of a carbon tax love to point to BC as an example of a carbon tax that didn’t hurt the economy. The problem is – they missed the key point. The original carbon tax legislation gave back all the money raised to individuals and business through lower income taxes. Now the NDP’s changed that.
The Alberta provincial election may bring the chickens home to roost for the BC and Federal governments thanks to their insensitivity to the financial and social hardship their “actions” have caused for so many people living and working in Alberta.
Dazed and Confused When It Comes To Gas Prices
Posted by Michael Campbell
on Friday, 19 April 2019 7:32
We want gas prices higher to discourage driving – that’s what the carbon tax is about. At least until prices go up – then some of the same climate crusaders start talking about subsidizing gasoline, which encourages driving.