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Carbon tax: The unseen burden on Canadian households

Tax costs families hundreds more than rebates: CTF.
Fueling up
The federal government claims 鈥渇amilies are going to be better off鈥 with its carbon tax and rebate scheme. However, a PBO report shows this is false, says the CTF.

OTTAWA — The Canadian Taxpayers Federation is shining a light on the high cost of the federal carbon tax as the government sends out . 

“The Parliamentary Budget Officer is clear: the carbon tax costs families hundreds of dollars more than the rebates they get back,” said Franco Terrazzano, CTF federal director.

“The PBO shows politicians are using magic math to mislead Canadians.”

The federal government  “families are going to be better off” with its carbon tax and rebate scheme. However, a shows this is false. 

The carbon tax will cost the average household up to $710 this year after the rebates.

“It simply isn’t credible to believe the feds can raise taxes, skim some off the top for administration costs and somehow make families better off,” Terrazzano said. “Prime Minister Justin Trudeau should scrap his carbon tax to save families hundreds of dollars every year.”

According to the PBO, the net cost (total cost – rebates) for the average household, 2023 per province are: Alberta $710; Saskatchewan $410; Manitoba $386; Ontario - $748; Nova Scotia $431; Prince Edward Island $465; Newfoundland and Labrador $347.

Bookmark SASKTODAY.ca, Saskatchewan's home page, at this link.


 

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