TAX CREDIT DEBATE
School Tax Credit Debate Rages On
Three months have passed
since Finance Minister Jim Flaherty unveiled his tax credit plan for parents who
send their children to private schools, as part of his May budget. But the
debate about this measure continues. Buried on page 24 of the 27-page
Budget 2001 speech was this little gem:
“Over the next five
years, we propose to phase in a partial tax credit for parents of children at
independent schools. With this measure, Ontario would join other provinces in
supporting educational choice.”
While the government
received some editorial support, the outrage and opposition to this proposal was
loud and widespread, although it came from predictable sources: teachers unions,
public education advocates, and class warfare careerists.
The tax credit will be
phased in over the next five years and when fully implemented, parents will be
allowed to deduct up to 50% of tuition paid to an independent school to a
maximum of $3,500.
As a general rule, the CTF
does not favour tax credits as a means to provide relief to taxpayers. The
multitude of tax credits already in effect and annual additions to this tally
only serve to further complicate the tax system.
It would be far better to
simplify the structure, lower rates across the board, broaden the base and
arrive at a situation with a few credits like a generous basic exemption, a
disability credit and maybe one or two others. But in the short run, this credit
is hopefully the first step in a series of measures to reach the important
destination of full school choice for parents and students.
As mentioned earlier,
opposition to this credit was and still is fierce. The rhetoric has
reached a fever pitch. So with this in mind, let’s review
some of the arguments against the independent school tax credit.
This will destroy
public education.
Ah, no. To start, the Ontario budget dropped another $360 million into
public education this year alone. Not to mention the fact that total
funding to Ontario’s public, catholic and French language schools has gone
from $12.9 billion in 1995/1996 to a projected $13.8 billion for 2001/2002.
Given that 70% to 80% of
public education costs are tied up in salaries, addressing the cost structure
throughout the public education system is necessary to re-allocate existing
dollars and better direct new government dollars directly to supplies and other
materials, as well as direct instruction, for students.
Again, another sop to
the rich since they’re the only ones who can afford private schools.
Sorry Charlie, wrong again. Recent Statistics Canada data shows that only
37% of children in private or independent schools come from households with
average incomes over $100,000. So 63% of the kids in private schools
across Canada (and presumably across Ontario) come from households where
combined income is less than $100,000. And 29% of children attending
private schools come from homes where income is less than $50,000.
This is an
unprecedented attack on public education.
No, five other provinces including Quebec and B.C. also provide some form of
private school support.
This could be the
beginning of a wider voucher system.
On this, the government’s opponents may have a point, and we hope they’re
bang on. Then all Ontario students and parents will have the freedom to
choose where to send their kids to school instead of the 100,000 or so now that
are privileged to choose from some 722 private or independent schools.
-- Walter Robinson,
Federal Director