Sunday, December 28, 2025
ADVT 
National

Fed study details groups hit hardest by tax system

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 14 Mar, 2022 11:32 AM
  • Fed study details groups hit hardest by tax system

OTTAWA - A new study from the Finance Department suggests that single parents, lower-income households and recent immigrants are more likely to lose more for extra earnings than most other groups of workers.

Also more likely to lose out from extra earnings through working more hours or getting a higher-paying job were workers who live in Quebec, and those between the ages of 35 and 44.

In some instances, the federal analysis found that those groups of workers were more likely to see 50 per cent or more of their earnings offset by higher taxes, a clawback in benefits, or a combination of the two.

Women were more likely than men to lose out on 60 per cent or more of their extra earnings, which the recently released analysis chalks up to their slightly greater reliance on federal supports.

Katherine Scott, a senior economist with the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives, says the study lends credence to calls from anti-poverty advocates and businesses for a broad review of the tax system.

She said a review is necessary because the tax system was designed in the past and doesn't fully capture the economy as it is currently structured, which creates difficult choices about working more, but not netting much more income.

"This is the way the system works. You're caught against the rock and a hard place," Scott said.

On average, workers lost $341 for every $1,000 increase in their earnings, based on the 2017 data the paper relied on.

Of that amount, about $146 was linked to higher federal income tax payments, $23 to a decline in federal benefits like the income-tested Canada Child Benefit, and $45 from payroll taxes.

The rest was a combination of provincial taxes and benefits.

The people dinged hardest were those earning between $24,739 and $33,724, who, on average, lost about $413 for every $1,000 in additional earnings. That average was just above the loss for the top 10 per cent of income earners.

The study said the proportion of low-income workers who lost out on 50 per cent or more of their extra earnings was double the proportion of workers in the country's top income bracket.

Not being much better off or faring financially worse after a boost in earnings could make workers think twice about taking on more hours or could lead others to stay out of the job market altogether.

A large share of the population facing the possibility of losing half or more of their extra earnings could also be "an impediment to the success of policies aimed at increasing labour supply," the Finance Department wrote in the study.

Understanding how the interaction of higher taxes and decreased benefits impacts workers' decisions has been bureaucrats' focus for years to reduce disincentives to work.

In theory, these "marginal effective tax rates," as they're known, can show policy-makers a path to prod people to work more, but that doesn't necessarily translate into real-world results, said Garima Talwar Kapoor, policy and research director at Maytree, an anti-poverty think-tank.

"Policy-makers want to think that people think about these things, but it's actually not how people make life decisions," she said. "There are lots of other factors."

She pointed to drops in the number of women working during the pandemic that were often linked to the availability of child care, rather than whether working more was going to make them lose out on child benefits.

That's why Talwar Kapoor said policy-makers should look for ways to help lower-income workers in particular maintain benefits while also boosting their labour market attachment.

MORE National ARTICLES

B.C. well on its way for booster campaign: Dix

B.C. well on its way for booster campaign: Dix
British Columbia's health minister says the province is "ahead of the curve" on recommendations by a national advisory group that Canadians ages 50 and older get a COVID-19 booster.  Adrian Dix says his ministry announced weeks ago that it would start its booster program and already 470,000 people have had a third shot. 

B.C. well on its way for booster campaign: Dix

Too early to peg B.C. flood damage costs: minister

Too early to peg B.C. flood damage costs: minister
But Selina Robinson says the effects of the floods and extreme weather may affect the government's bottom line after she met today with the Economic Forecast Council, a 13-member private-sector group that is giving her advice before next spring's budget.

Too early to peg B.C. flood damage costs: minister

405 COVID19 cases for Friday

405 COVID19 cases for Friday
There are currently 3,071 active cases of COVID-19 in the province, and 214,047 people who tested positive have recovered. Of the active cases, 276 individuals are currently in hospital and 95 are in intensive care. The remaining people are recovering at home in self-isolation.

405 COVID19 cases for Friday

Feds delay new climate plan three months

Feds delay new climate plan three months
Environment Minister Steven Guilbeault says the new federal climate plan won't be ready until the end of March. The net-zero accountability law passed in June requires the government to make public a greenhouse-gas emissions reduction plan for 2030 within six months.

Feds delay new climate plan three months

Disaster expert shares tips for flood recovery

Disaster expert shares tips for flood recovery
Caroline McDonald-Harker, a professor in the department of sociology and anthropology at Mount Royal University in Calgary, has studied the impacts of extensive flooding in southern Alberta in 2013 and the 2016 Fort McMurray wildfire.    

Disaster expert shares tips for flood recovery

StatCan: Economy added 154K jobs in November

StatCan: Economy added 154K jobs in November
Statistics Canada says the economy added 154,000 jobs in November as the labour market showed more signs it's returning to pre-pandemic levels. The unemployment rate fell to 6.0 per cent last month compared with 6.7 per cent in October.

StatCan: Economy added 154K jobs in November