加拿大的平等公式:窥视黑匣子内部……及以后

James P. Feehan
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引用次数: 6

摘要

安大略省在2009年才开始接受均衡支付,这是其历史上的第一次。安大略一陷入“一无所有”的状态,联邦政府就对平等支出的增长设定了上限。这为联邦政府节省了大量资金,但却让安大略省和其他受助人付出了从那时起本该得到的更大数额的资金。从成本控制的角度来看,联邦政府采取行动控制可能膨胀的均等化成本是可以理解的,但它最终违背了均等化的目的。联邦政府强加的固定增长规则只是当前均衡安排中需要纠正的几个因素之一。联邦政府应该终止这种做法,并承担由此产生的成本增加。然而,如果这一成本是繁重的,那么它可以考虑调整其向各省的其他主要转移支付——加拿大卫生转移支付和加拿大社会转移支付——并减少向远高于均衡标准的各省的人均转移支付。这比将整个负担转移到低于标准的人身上要好。目前均等化安排的另一个缺陷是,在均等化计算的自然资源类别中,纳入了国有水电公司向各省所有者汇款的收入。其中许多公司不仅仅是能源生产商,而且还垂直整合,有传输和零售业务,有些公司根本没有资源,而是依赖于在市场上购买的燃料。此外,民间能源企业缴纳的税金不属于自然资源税,而是列入企业所得税。这意味着该公式本质上是不一致的,基于所有权配置文件进行区分。水电汇款应从计算均衡公式中的自然资源收入类别中删除。它们应该归入企业所得税类别,就像其他商业皇家公司的收入和私营企业缴纳的税款一样。除了这个公式之外,现在是时候重新考虑对商业国有企业免征企业所得税的做法了。一个更根本的、人们早已认识到的问题是,接受均等化支付的省份有动机压低它们为水力发电收取的水租金。降低水租金会减少省级水电收入,从而使这些省份有权获得更大的均衡支付,同时使居民受益于更便宜的水电费。从经验上看,“没有”省的水电平均费率确实低于“有”省,这为非接收省份为接收省份的居民提供更便宜的能源补贴的批评提供了证据。近几十年来,竞争激烈的北美批发电力市场的发展日益加强,使评估水租金的公平市场价格变得更加可行。在改革加拿大的均等化公式时,更新均等化公式不应考虑水租金收入,而应考虑水租金财政能力,这应该是最优先考虑的事项,以使其更接近其创建背后的原则。现在也到了将市政府的用户收费收入纳入计算公式的时候了。这些收入意义重大,如果把市政财产税收入包括在内,就没有什么意义了。平等并非失控,但改革是必要的。在这些方面采取行动应该是优先事项。这些内部问题应该先解决,然后再考虑更复杂的任务,即扩展这个公式,以考虑各省政府不同的支出需求和成本。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Canada's Equalization Formula: Peering Inside the Black Box...And Beyond
Ontario only started receiving equalization payments, for the first time in its history, in 2009. As soon as Ontario slipped into that “have-not” status, the federal government imposed a cap on the growth of equalization payouts. That led to substantial federal savings, but has cost Ontario and other recipients what would have been much larger payments since then. The federal government’s move to rein in the potential ballooning cost of equalization may have been understandable, from a cost-control perspective, but it ultimately defied the very purpose of equalization. The fixed-growth rule imposed by the federal government is just one of several elements within the current equalization arrangement that should be corrected. The federal government should end that practice and absorb any resulting increase in cost. However, if that cost is onerous, then it could consider adjustments of its other major transfers to the provinces – Canada Health Transfer and the Canada Social Transfer – and reduce those per-capita transfers to provinces that are well ahead of the equalization norm. That would be better than shifting the entire burden to the those below the norm. Another flaw in the current equalization arrangement is the inclusion of Crown-owned hydro corporations’ remittances of earnings to their provincial owners in the natural resources category of equalization calculations. Many of these corporations are not simply energy producers, but are also vertically integrated, with transmission and retail sales operations, and some have no resources at all, but rely instead on fuel purchased in the marketplace. Moreover, taxes paid by private energy corporations are not considered part of the natural resource category but are included in the business income tax category. This means the formula is essentially inconsistent, discriminating based on the ownership profile. Hydro remittances should be removed from the natural resource revenue category in the formula that calculates equalization. They should go in the business income tax category, just as do the earnings of other commercial Crown corporations and taxes paid by private businesses. Going beyond the formula, it is time to re-consider the practice of exempting commercial Crown corporations from corporate income taxation. A more fundamental and long-recognized problem is the incentive for provinces receiving equalization payments to underprice the water-rental rates they charge for hydro production. Lowering water-rental rates has the effect of reducing provincial hydro revenues, which can entitle those provinces to larger equalization payments, while benefitting residents with cheaper hydro rates. Looked at empirically, “have-not” provinces do charge lower average rates for hydro than do “have” provinces, lending credence to the criticism that non-recipient provinces subsidize cheaper energy for residents of recipient provinces. The increased development of competitive North American wholesale electricity markets in recent decades has made it more feasible to assess what a fair market price for water-rental rates could be. Updating the equalization formula to consider not water-rental revenue, but water-rental fiscal capacity, should be the highest priority of all in reforming Canada’s equalization formula to align it more closely to the principles behind its creation. It is also time to include municipal government revenues from user fees in the formula. Those revenues are significant and it makes little sense to exclude them when municipal property tax revenues are included. Equalization is not out of control but reform is needed. Action on these fronts should be the priorities. These insidethe-box issues should be resolved before going beyond and considering the more complex task of extending the formula to account for provincial governments’ different expenditure needs and costs.
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