The PST rolls back, B.C. moves forward
With the economy turning the corner and the budget balanced, Finance Minister Gary Collins today announced a reduction in the provincial sales tax rate to 7% from 7.5%.
October 25, 2004
The PST rollback marks another step in B.C.’s economic recovery. The reduction from seven and a half to seven per cent will put $270 million back into taxpayers’ pockets.
Nearly three years ago, when B.C. was suddenly hit with substantial wage increases for health care, the province made the difficult decision to increase the tax by half a percentage point.But the BC Liberals promised to remove the increase as soon as economic conditions allowed. That time is now.
Compared to three years ago, there’s an entirely different mood across the province. Forestry and mining are on a comeback, manufacturing and exports are increasing, oil and gas are booming, housing starts are red hot, the retail sector has caught fire, business confidence is way up and once again B.C. leads the nation in job creation.
Deficits are dead and budgets are balanced -- yet there’s more money than ever for health care and education. And now we have budget surpluses far above expectations.
The tough decisions paid off. B.C. is back on track. The PST rollback marks another level in Canada’s most remarkable economic upswing.
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