N.S. Liberals bring in broad middle class tax cut in pre-election budget
HALIFAX — Nova Scotia’s Liberal government has promised an average $160 tax cut for half the province’s population, in a surplus budget that seeds the ground for an election campaign that may begin within days.
Premier Stephen McNeil touted the move as proof his restraint of public sector wages over the past year has permitted him to shift money back into taxpayers’ pockets, even as he books a $26-million surplus in this year’s $10.5-billion budget.
“This is the way through the tax structure to leave more money in the pockets of Nova Scotians who require it the most,” he said Thursday after the budget was tabled.
The pledge would reduce taxes for 500,000 low and middle-income earners by increasing the basic personal exemption by up to $3,000 for taxable income up to $75,000.


