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Classification of government revenue and expenditures
Revenue
Own source revenue
Income taxes
- Personal income tax– Encompasses general levies on income
of individuals and unincorporated businesses as well as special levies on
income, such as surtax, which governments charge from time to time. The proceeds
from the income tax on capital gains of individuals and unincorporated businesses
are included here. Also, refundable tax credits are in this category, and
they are grossed up as revenue and expenditures.
- Corporation income tax– Includes most federal and provincial
taxes on taxable profits of corporations. It also includes special taxes which
are occasionally levied on profits of corporations and refundable tax credits
which are grossed up as revenue and expenditures. Federal corporation capital
taxes are also included here.
- Mining and logging taxes– Accounts for specific taxes which
are sometimes levied on profits of natural resource based industry. Also included
are refundable tax credits that are grossed up as revenue and expenditures.
These taxes were previously classified to natural resource revenue.
- Taxes on payments to non-residents– Includes the federal
tax withheld at source on payments to nonresidents (both individuals and corporations)
of dividends, interest, rents, royalties, alimony, managerial fees and amounts
arising from trusts and estates as well as withholdings on foreign insurance
companies.
- Other income taxes– Includes income taxes which cannot
be allocated to any of the other categories.
Consumption taxes
- General sales tax– The proceeds of the federal Goods and
Services Tax (GST) and of provincial retail sales taxes are recorded in this
classification. In April 1996, the federal government reached an agreement
with three provinces to harmonize their provincial retail sales taxes with
the federal GST (Newfoundland, New Brunswick and Nova Scotia). The federal
remittances for this new Harmonized Sales Taxes (HST) to these provinces are
classified under this category.
- Alcoholic beverages tax– Includes liquor gallonage tax
and all forms of special levies, excise tax, excise duty or other, imposed
on the production and sale of alcoholic beverages.
- Tobacco tax– Encompasses special levies such as excise
tax, excise duty and provincial specific taxes on the production and sale
of tobacco products. General sales taxes and customs duties applicable to
tobacco products are included under their respective headings.
- Amusement tax– Includes tax receipts from admissions to
theaters, cinemas, recreational, cultural or other entertainment activities.
Taxes levied by provincial governments on pari-mutual betting at horse race
tracks and on casinos’ gaming activities are also included here.
- Gasoline and motive fuel taxes– Includes the proceeds of
specific taxes on gasoline, on aviation and diesel fuel and on propane or
other substances when used as motive fuel.
- Customs duties– Apply only to the federal level and take
into account the proceeds from levies on commodities imported into Canada
e.g., manufactured goods and food, beverages and tobacco.
- Remitted liquor profits– Accounts for total remitted profits
of government owned liquor boards. Because government owned liquor boards
operate as fiscal monopolies their profits are treated as taxes on products
(indirect taxes).
- Remitted gaming profits– Accounts for total remitted profits
of government owned lottery and other gaming corporations. Because government
owned lottery and other gaming corporations operate as fiscal monopolies,
their profits are considered as taxes on products (indirect taxes).
- Other consumption taxes– Includes air transportation tax,
taxes on meals and hotels and miscellaneous consumption taxes.
Property and related taxes
- General property taxes– In Canada, taxation of real property
(land and improvements) is shared by provincial and local governments. In
the statistical data on provincial governments, the amount shown as revenue
from real property taxation is exclusive of amounts collected for and passed
on to local governments which include the amount collected for and remitted
to them with the amount they collected themselves. Property owned and occupied
by most general governments is exempt from property tax. To compensate for
the loss of revenue due to the exemption, grants in lieu of taxes are paid
by the federal and provincial governments to provincial and local governments
raising property taxes. Includes lot levies (the additional lump sum development
charges levied on properties benefiting from local improvements or additional
capital facilities), special assessments (levies made by a municipality on
a specific group of properties to pay for a service such as the provision
of a sidewalk, supplied to those properties only) and grants in lieu of taxes.
- Capital taxes– Includes the taxes levied by provincial
governments on the paid-up capital of corporations. Federal government taxes
on the paid-up capital of corporations are included under federal corporation
income taxes.
- Other property-related taxes– Includes land transfer taxes,
business taxes and wealth transfer taxes.
Other taxes
- Payroll taxes– Encompasses tax revenues levied as a percentage
of wages and salaries. In some provinces, the proceeds from these taxes are
used to help finance a number of functions while in others they are specifically
assigned to health and/or education or to worker training. As of 1998,
four provinces were levying a payroll tax. - Newfoundland and Labrador, Quebec,
Ontario and Manitoba. Employer contributions to CPP, QPP, EI, etc., which
to an extent are also based on salaries and wages paid by the employer are
brought under the category “Contributions to Social Insurance Plans.”
- Motor vehicle licences– Accounts for the proceeds of registration
fees, drivers’ licences, permits and other fees relating to the ownership
and operation of motor vehicles.
- Natural resource taxes and licences– Accounts for the proceeds
of taxes levied on private properties or production of natural resources.
Freehold mineral right tax is classified under this category. Also includes
licence fees paid to be able to conduct activities related to natural resources
but except activities connected to exploration of natural resources.
- Miscellaneous taxes– Includes agricultural insurance premiums,
insurance premium taxes, hunting and fishing licences, liquor licences and
other licences and permits, business fines and penalties and business donations.
Health and drug insurance premiums
Includes premiums levied by some provinces and used specifically to finance
their hospitalization, medical care and drug insurance programs.
Contributions to social security plans
These contributions are broken down into types of plans: Employment Insurance
contributions (EI), contributions to workers’ compensation boards, contributions
to non-autonomous pension plans, contributions to Canada and Quebec Pension
Plans and other social insurance plan contributions (includes contributions
to the Quebec Provincial Parental Insurance Plan).
Sales of goods and services
As providers of public goods and services, institutions within the government
component of the public sector engage in transactions of commercial nature
with organizations or individuals in the private sector and with other institutions
within the government component. The revenue generated from such transactions
are called “Sales of Goods and Services,” which could be defined
as receipts of fees and charges paid in proportion to the cost or distribution
of the government goods and services provided to the payer.
Investment Income
This category includes natural resource royalties, remitted trading profits,
interest income and other investment income.
Other revenue from own sources
Includes other fines and penalties, capital transfers from own sources,
other donation and miscellaneous revenue from own sources.
Transfers
General purpose transfers from other government sub-sectors
General purpose transfers are broken down by level of government from which
the transfers originate. Transfers from the federal government are compiled
as general purpose capital transfers from the federal government, statutory
subsidies, shares of federal taxes on preferred share dividends and on the
income of certain public utilities, tax revenue guarantees, equalization,
the Canada Health and Social Transfer, reciprocal taxation and stabilization.
Specific purpose transfers from other government sub-sectors
Specific purpose transfers are broken down by level of government from
which the transfers originate. This group covers transfers that must be applied
to particular activities such as: federal transfers to provinces for the improvement
of certain highways; provincial transfers to municipalities for sewage and
refuse disposal; provincial transfers to education and health institutions
to help them finance their operations.
Expenditures
General government services
This classification includes executive and legislative services general
administration and other expenditures of a general nature.
Protection of persons and property
Includes outlays for services provided to ensure the security of persons
and property. Protection extends beyond safeguard from external aggression
and criminal action; it includes measures to protect the individual from negligence
and abuse, and activities to ensure the orderly transaction of affairs of
the community. The category includes national defence, courts of law, correction
and rehabilitation services, policing, firefighting and regulatory services.
Transportation and communications
This category includes outlays for all phases of the acquisition, construction,
operation and maintenance of the relevant transportation and communications
facilities and equipment as well as expenditures pertaining to related engineering
and technical surveys. This function includes the government transfers to
own business enterprises engaged in the transportation activities, especially
public transit and railway services. Included are air transport, road transit,
public transit, rail transport, water transport, pipelines and telecommunications.
Health
Includes expenditures made to ensure that necessary health services are
available to all citizens. Residential care facilities and other health and
social services institutions providing medical care and professional nursing
supervision are considered as institutions providing health services while
those providing room and board with no or limited medical care and nursing
supervision are considered as institutions providing social services. Also
included are expenditures of hospitals’ ancillary enterprises, i.e.,
entities that exist to furnish goods and services to patients, staff and others
(food services, parking, etc.). Four sub-functions identify the major components
of this classification.
- Hospital care– Covers outlays in respect of all kinds of
hospital services, i.e., those provided by general hospitals, public health
clinics, as well as by acute disease, chronic disease, convalescent, isolation
and mental hospitals. It also includes expenditures pertaining to nursing
schools attached to hospitals. Where nursing schools come under the responsibility
of the Department of Education, the related expenditures are allocated to
the sub-function “Education - post-secondary.” Expenditures of
all hospitals (private, public, religious, etc.) are included except for national
defence and veterans hospitals whose costs are allocated to the “National
Defence” and “Veterans Benefits” sub-functions respectively.
- Medical care– Comprises outlays in respect of general medical
care and drug programs as well as outlays incurred for dental and visiting-nurse
services and on out-patient care services. It also includes outlays for medical
care provided by hospitals, public residential care facilities, workers’
compensation boards and other public health and social services institutions.
Transfers to private residential care facilities and other health and social
services institutions to help them finance their medical care activities are
included here.
- Preventive care– Consists of a wide variety of outlays
which are intended to prevent the occurrence of diseases and to mitigate their
effect. It covers public health clinics; communicable disease control services
(including immunization, treatment, isolation and quarantine outside hospital
premises); food and drug inspection services; hospitals which offer preventive
services to patients; government establishments (not located in hospitals,
e.g., residential care facilities and other health and social services institutions)
providing nursing, hygiene and nutrition advisory services, and government
organizations conducting research on the causes and consequences of particular
diseases or addictions (i.e., cancer treatment foundations). Also included
are transfers to private facilities providing preventive care, i.e., private
residential care facilities.
- Other health services– Includes outlays on clinics for
the treatment of retarded or emotionally disturbed persons and on laboratory
and diagnostic services, grants to health-oriented organizations, and expenditures
on other health-related services such as health department administration,
health statistics, staff training and other services of health establishments
(e.g., hospitals and other health and social services institutions), ambulance
services, medical rehabilitation and indemnities to injured persons and their
dependants which cannot be allocated to the other sub-functions. Also included
are outlays on protection of health and health inspection, and expenditures
of ancillary enterprises of health and social services institutions.
Social services
Covers actions taken by government, either alone or in co-operation with
the citizenry, to offset or to forestall situations where the well-being of
individuals or families is threatened by circumstances beyond their control.
It goes beyond the concept of “welfare” which covers assistance
(transfers) and services to individuals who are so disadvantaged that the
universal social security services are inadequate to provide for their well-being
or who fail to qualify for support from those services. The function comprises
the following six sub-functions:
- Social assistance– Consists of transfer payments (including
refundable tax credits) to help individuals and families maintain a socially
acceptable level of earnings. Although the workers’ compensation benefits,
pension plan benefits, veteran’s benefits and motor vehicle accident
compensations, are considered a form of income assistance, they are reported
in separate sub-functions. This sub-function comprises the following programs:
the general welfare payments to disadvantaged individuals, the refundable
tax credits and rebates for low-and-middle income individuals or families
(which are used more and more as instruments of social policy to offset taxation
of the elderly and disadvantaged i.e., property and sales tax credits), outlays
relating to contributory plans such as the Canada Pension Plan and the Quebec
Pension Plan, and non-contributory plans, such as old age security (including
the guaranteed income supplement), family allowance payments and child tax
benefits made under federal and provincial governments programs, the employment
insurance benefits, Quebec Parental Insurance Plan benefits the rent supplement,
the spouse’s allowances and the blind and disabled persons allowances.
The administration costs related to those programs are also included.
- Workers’ compensation benefits– Includes expenditures
on administration and for benefits, other than rehabilitation and medical
care, related to workers’ compensation schemes.
- Pension plan benefits and other expenditures– Accounts
for the following transactions: (i) Pensions and other benefits paid
under pension schemes that are embedded in the government’s budgetary
framework (pay as you go plans) such as the Public Service Superannuation
Plan of Saskatchewan and (ii) Pension and other benefits paid under
the nonautonomous pension schemes, i.e. plans that have full separate accounts
within the Consolidated Revenue Fund but are not separate institutional units
such as the federal Public Service Superannuation Account and the annual surpluses
(contributions of employees and employers plus interest earnings less pensions
and benefits paid), of the non-autonomous pension plans which are considered
household’s claims on government.
- Veterans benefits– As well as administrative costs, pensions,
allowances and grants, it includes outlays pertaining to the administration
of veterans hospitals, to the provision of medical supplies and prosthetic
appliances, to the provision of medical, educational and social welfare services
and to the forgiveness of loans under the Veterans’ Land Act.
- Motor vehicle accident compensations– Includes compensations
paid to victims of bodily injuries provided for by government automobile insurance
plans.
- Other social services– Accounts for expenses related to
the provision of services to old age, to persons who are unable to lead a
normal life due to a physical or mental impairment, to persons temporarily
unable to work due to sickness, to households with dependent children, to
persons who are survivors of a deceased person (spouse, children, etc.) and
to other needy persons. It also includes direct expenditures of public institutions
(hospitals, residential care facilities, other health and social services
institutions) providing social services and transfers to private organizations
(e.g., residential care facilities) providing similar services.
Education
Includes the costs of developing, improving and operating educational systems
and the provision of specific education services. Also included are expenditures
of universities’ ancillary enterprises, i.e., entities providing goods
and services to students, staff and others (bookstores, food services, residences,
parking). It is subdivided into the following four sub-functions:
- Elementary and secondary education– Encompasses outlays
for educational services from kindergarten to senior matriculation. It also
includes expenditure for technical and vocational training which is provided
separately at the secondary school level as well as expenditure for general
administration and maintenance of standards, contributions of governments,
as employers, to teachers pension plans, support to students, the construction
of buildings and the operation of education programs. Also included are expenses
for pupil transportation, and for text books, electronics, equipment and supplies
used in the education process. Schools for the handicapped, schools for Indians
and Inuit and transfers to private elementary and secondary schools come under
this sub-function.
- Post-secondary education– Refers to the kind of education
generally obtained in universities or in degree and non-degree granting community
colleges and specialized educational institutions. Included in these colleges
and institutions are teachers’ colleges, advanced technical institutes
and junior colleges, CEGEPS, music conservatories and schools specializing
in the instruction and training of artists, and nursing education provided
by universities and colleges. This category includes the transfers or direct
expenditures for the operations of universities, colleges and institutions
providing this kind of education. Also included are bursaries, scholarships
and other types of financial assistance to students (loan forgiveness, interest
relief, etc.) as well as refundable learning tax credits.
- Special retraining services– Comprises outlays made for
the purpose of upgrading the skills of individuals. It includes the cost of
courses provided under the Federal Manpower Training Program and the new Labor
Market Development Agreement, the purchases of on-the-job training for unemployed
insurance recipients, cash allowances or subsidies to workers and persons
available for work undergoing training, tax credits intended to encourage
systematic employee training by corporations and other similar services. Excluded
is police training, which is classified as “Protection of Persons and
Property.”
- Other education– Covers outlays that either overlap or
cannot be allocated to the other sub-functions. It includes the general administration
expenses of departments of education, the costs of statistical and research
activities pertaining to education and the expenses of apprenticeship training.
Payments made by one government to another or to the private sector to encourage
proficiency in the official languages are also included, as are costs of special
instructional arrangements such as evening classes and correspondence courses.
Expenditures of ancillary enterprises of colleges and universities, e.g.,
bookstores and cafeterias, are included here.
Resource conservation and industrial development
This classification includes a wide array of services related to the conservation
and development of natural resources and the development and promotion of
industries. Included are agriculture, fish and game, oil and gas, forestry,
mining, water power and tourist promotion.
Environment
While certain components of this function are similar to some sub-functions
of “Protection of Persons and Property” and others with sub-functions
of “Health,” they are grouped in this function through their common
aim of ensuring the most favourable environment for people and of minimizing
the deleterious effects of modern living on that environment. Included are
water purification and supply, sewage collection and disposal, garbage and
waste collection and disposal, pollution control and other environmental services.
Recreation and culture
The purpose of this function is to portray government participation in
the field of leisure either through developing, improving or operating leisure
facilities or through assistance payments to individuals and private organizations
engaged in promoting leisure activities.
Labour, employment and immigration
Included in this function are outlays related to the development and promotion
of labour relations and fair employment conditions, as well as to various
immigration programs.
Housing
This function now includes all government outlays on housing with the exception
of transfers (rent supplement) to individuals made to help alleviate their
current rental cost which are allocated to the sub-function “Social
Assistance.”
Foreign affairs and international assistance
Provides for expenditures pertaining to the formal relations of Canada
with other sovereign states. It accounts for contributions made to foster
economic development and to improve social conditions in foreign lands, e.g.,
the expenditures of the Canadian International Development Agency. (Expenditures
on trade or immigration promotion abroad and cultural exchange with foreign
countries are respectively classified under “Trade and Industry,”“Immigration”
and “Culture.”)
Regional planning and development
Covers expenditures related to community and regional development affairs
and services. These include expenditures on planning and zoning and on community
and regional development.
Research establishments
This function provides for expenditures pertaining to organizations like
the National Research Council of Canada and certain provincial research establishments
whose prime purpose is pure or applied scientific research and the promotion
of developments resulting from such activities. Also included are grants to
individuals and non-government establishments engaged in similar types of
research as well as refundable tax credits for research and development. It
does not cover the expenditure of the Medical Research Council which is allocated
to the function “Health”.
General purpose transfers to other governments subsectors
As in the case of revenue, intergovernment transfers are classified and
specified by level of government sub-sectors. Included in this function are
the Canada Health and Social Transfer (CHST) which has replaced the Established
Programs Financing (EPF) and Canada Assistance Plan (CAP) transfers previously
classified as specific purpose transfers and the Quebec’s transfer to
the federal government of the proceeds of the 3.0 personal income
tax points granted to Quebec under the ex Youth Allowances Program. Specific
purpose transfers are not included here. Because they are made on the condition
that the recipient carries out specific programs, they are included in the
related expenditure functions.
Debt charges
This category is subdivided into “interest” and “other
debt charges.” It excludes debt retirement as well as realized and unrealized
gains and losses on foreign exchange which are now classified as part of the
Financing Account, and not considered as expenditures.
Other expenditures
This category provides for expenditures which cannot be allocated to any
of the other functions. It is occasionally used in the estimate cycles to
include contingency reserves which are there mainly to handle unforeseen changes
in the economy. It also includes the balancing adjustments or residual error
of the consolidation exercise.