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Revenue Options for Canadian Municipalities. Enid Slack Institute on Municipal Finance and Governance Presentation to Canadian National Summit on Municipal Governance July 11, 2005. Outline of Presentation. Background on municipal finance Fiscal challenges facing municipalities
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Revenue Options for Canadian Municipalities Enid Slack Institute on Municipal Finance and Governance Presentation to Canadian National Summit on Municipal Governance July 11, 2005
Outline of Presentation • Background on municipal finance • Fiscal challenges facing municipalities • Revenue options - existing sources • Need for a mix of taxes at the local level • Revenue options – new sources • Revenue sharing versus taxing authority
Background on Municipal Finance – Expenditures • Municipal expenditures, Canada, 2003: • Transportation (19%) • Health, social services, social housing (13%) • Fire and police protection (17%) • Water, sewers, garbage (17%) • Recreation and culture (12%) • Debt charges (4%) Planning and development (2%) • Other (16%)
Background on Municipal Finance –Revenues • Municipal revenues, Canada, 2003: • Property and related taxes – 53% • User fees – 23% • Provincial transfers – 15% • Federal transfers –1% • Other revenues – 8%
Fiscal Challenges Facing Municipalities • Offloading of services • International competitiveness • Urban sprawl • No diversification of revenue sources
Fiscal Challenges – Success on Fiscal Measures • Municipalities have done well on fiscal measures: • Size of the operating deficit • Amount of borrowing for capital • Rate of property tax increases • Reliance on provincial grants • Extent of tax arrears
Fiscal Challenges –Infrastructure and Services • Fiscal health may been achieved at the expense of the overall health of Canadian municipalities: • The state of municipal infrastructure (water, sewers, roads etc.) • The quality of service delivery
Revenue Options – Existing Sources • Property taxes • User fees • Development charges • Borrowing
Property Taxes • Good tax for local governments (related to benefits received, property is immovable, visible tax) • Modest increase • Over-taxation of business
User Fees • Price at marginal cost • Altering behaviour versus generating revenues
Development Charges • Appropriate to pay for growth-related costs associated with development • Marginal versus average cost pricing • Tool to reduce sprawl
Borrowing • Appropriate to pay for capital expenditures • Debt charges relative to own-source revenues have fallen in Canadian municipalities • Need for new debt instruments
Municipal Access to Other Taxes • Cities should have access to a mix of taxes: • Range of expenditure responsibilities (need revenues to match) • Services used by commuters/visitors • Revenues that grow with the economy • Increase municipal flexibility
Revenue Options – New Tax Sources • Income tax • Sales tax • Fuel tax • Hotel tax
Income Tax • Revenue elasticity • Appropriate to finance social service expenditures • Large potential revenues
Sales Tax • Revenue elasticity • Taxes commuters and visitors • Incentive for cross-border shopping
Fuel Tax • Benefit tax if used to pay for roads • Not as good as tolls to reduce congestion • Not very elastic • Limited revenue potential
Hotel/Motel Occupancy Tax • Taxes visitors to pay for the services they use (e.g. roads, policing) • Limited revenue potential • Potential “cross-border” problems
Revenue Options: Revenue sharing versus local taxing authority • Municipalities should set their own tax rates: • Autonomy • Flexibility • Accountability • Stability and predictability • But have to address border problems • Expenditures and tax rates need to be determined on a regional basis
Concluding Comments • Municipalities face fiscal challenges • Municipalities would benefit from new sources of revenue • Municipalities could also do more with existing revenue sources