von Garvin said:
Actually, the gov't has been quite clear on this. The 16% to 15% "cut" offered by the previous government never received official approval: the house dissolved prior to its implementation.
Well, the truth as always lies somewhere in between. The Gov't is being disingenuous in stating that it was never legislated but the last tax cut from 16-15% was passed by parliament through a "ways & means" motion. So it's (remarkably) clear explanation isn't all that clear and could be considered spin.
"The business of “Ways and Means” is the process by which the government sets out its economic policy through the presentation of a Budget and obtains parliamentary approval to raise the necessary revenues through taxation. The most important revenue-raising statutes (i.e., those which replenish the Consolidated Revenue Fund) are the Income Tax Act, the Excise Tax Act, the Excise Act and the Customs Tariff.
A principle fundamental to the Ways and Means process is the requirement that taxation originate in the House of Commons. The Constitution Act, 1867, provides that “Bills for appropriating any Part of the Public Revenue, or for imposing any Tax or Impost, shall originate in the House of Commons”, [304] a requirement echoed in the Standing Orders of the House. [305]."
The above is cited from http://www.parl.gc.ca/marleaumontpetit/DocumentViewer.aspx?DocId=1001&Sec=ch18&Seq=5&Lang=E
Based on my quote above, the financial procedure of a 'ways & means' motion is enshrined in various pieces of financial legislation and in the standing orders of the house of commons. So whether or not you consider it legislated or not is largely due to semantics and likely depends on whether you drink Tory blue kool-aid or Liberal red kool-aid.
However, further on in the website quoted above, the relevance of a 'ways & means' motion is that parliament has approved the gov't's current budgetary policy. In effect, the previous tax cut was enacted and the public got that tax break.
von Garvin said:
So, an "increase" of 0.5% of the first 15K (or so) of income means 75 bucks more a year on that amount.
I'm not sure that it's on the first 15K. Isn't it on the first 35K? Then from $35,001 to $70,000 it's 22%, from $70,001 to $113,804 it's 26%, then for over $113,804 it's 29%. Can someone verify this?
dapaterson said:
One other reason taxes withheld tend to rise during the year: once you've hit the maximum EI and CPP deductions for the year, the amount withheld for income tax increases. People tend to hit those limits mid-year.
I'm not there yet. For me, that usually occurs sometime in late September or October. Although I thought your tax burden remains unchanged because my take home pay typically goes up when I max out on my CPP and my EI.