Budget 2024: Here’s what Canadians want from Ottawa – National | 24CA News

Politics
Published 05.04.2024
Budget 2024: Here’s what Canadians want from Ottawa – National | 24CA News

Canadians are largely searching for assist paying their payments within the 2024 federal price range, not investments within the army or clear power transitions, in response to polling launched Friday.

The Ipsos ballot carried out completely for Global News surveyed 1,000 Canadians between March 15 and 18 about what their prime three priorities have been for the upcoming federal price range, set to be tabled by Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland on April 16.

The cumulative prime precedence for these polled was assist with the rising value of residing (44 per cent).

Women (53 per cent) extra so than males (36 per cent) rated cost-of-living help as a precedence. Half of gen X respondents (these born between 1965 and 1980) stated they have been searching for pocketbook assist in the price range, the very best proportion of any era.


The mostly cited priorities from Canadians surveyed by Ipsos concerning the upcoming 2024 federal price range.


Global News / Ipsos

“Pocketbook issues dominate the list of the things that Canadians want to see addressed in the budget,” Sean Simpson, senior vice-president at Ipsos Global Affairs, tells Global News.

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He says he sees a transparent focus amongst voters on taxes, affordability and different family funds within the polling.

“All those issues, in some way, shape or form, are tied to the amount of money that Canadians have that seems to be draining from their wallet at record speeds these days,” Simpson says.

The different price range line merchandise garnering vital curiosity is investments in well being care, with 38 per cent of respondents rating it as a precedence.


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But when requested a couple of hypothetical hike of 1 per cent within the GST to fund companies like pharmacare – the framework for which the Liberals have launched as a part of their supply-and-confidence take care of the NDP – solely 5 per cent of these surveyed stated they noticed it as a precedence.

Instead, extra Canadians are signalling that they’re hoping for a lowered tax burden from Ottawa.

One in three respondents stated they’d wish to see a lower to their private tax charges included within the 2024 price range, whereas one in 5 stated they need the Liberals to freeze the federal carbon value, which rose on April 1. The deliberate improve spurred countrywide protests that halted site visitors on main Canadian roadways.


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Some 19 per cent stated they wished to see the Liberals cut back their general spending, whereas 18 per cent signalled decreasing the federal deficit ought to be a precedence for Ottawa this spring.

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But like Canadians, the federal authorities is discovering it has much less money available to fulfill its personal rising prices, together with servicing debt below the load of upper rates of interest. The parliamentary price range officer stated in a report final month that the slowing financial system and rising debt prices are leaving Ottawa with little fiscal wiggle room heading into the 2024 price range.

Housing, army and environmental measures decrease priorities

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Liberal MPs have been on a cross-country tour teeing up line gadgets within the price range associated to Canada’s housing market, affordability and homebuilding efforts.

Some 15 per cent of respondents to the Ipsos ballot stated they’d wish to see measures that may cool the housing market within the federal price range, whereas 12 per cent indicated that funding to construct new houses was a precedence.

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Only 5 per cent of respondents stated a rise within the GST rebate for homebuyers was a precedence, although that rose to 10 per cent of gen Z respondents (born between 1997 and 2005).

Other priorities, resembling growing defence spending and accelerating the transition to wash power, ranked decrease on Canadians’ lists:

  • Investing in Canada’s ​Armed Forces and defence​ (11 per cent)
  • To help the transition to greener power​ (10 per cent)
  • Incentives to decrease their carbon footprint​ (9 per cent)
  • Help companies scuffling with the pandemic affect (eight per cent)
  • Freeze hiring within the federal public service (six per cent)

These are a number of the findings of an Ipsos ballot carried out between March 15 and 18, 2024, on behalf of Global News. For this survey, a pattern of 1,000 Canadians aged 18-plus was interviewed. Quotas and weighting have been employed to make sure that the pattern’s composition displays that of the Canadian inhabitants in response to census parameters. The precision of Ipsos on-line polls is measured utilizing a credibility interval. In this case, the ballot is correct to inside ± 3.8 proportion factors, 19 occasions out of 20, had all Canadians aged 18+ been polled. The credibility interval can be wider amongst subsets of the inhabitants. All pattern surveys and polls could also be topic to different sources of error, together with, however not restricted to protection error, and measurement error.


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