Sunday, December 14, 2025
ADVT 
National

Tax changes to make system fair not stifle business growth: Trudeau

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 26 Sep, 2017 11:30 AM
    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says the government has no intention of stifling growth for small businesses and start-ups with its upcoming changes to the tax code.
     
    Trudeau said Monday he has listened to the feedback and agrees with some of it, and that the government is now looking at balancing the need to make the tax code more fair without hurting investment.
     
    "We need to make sure we are encouraging entrepreneurs, encouraging risk takers, encouraging success in the start-ups," Trudeau told reporters at an event in Toronto.
     
    The consultation period on the proposals ends next week and anxiety is high for business owners awaiting their fate and for politicians getting an earful from them.
     
    That anxiety may continue at least until after Thanksgiving as it is expected to take the government at least a week to figure out its next step.
     
    There are three main facets to the Liberal tax changes, some of which Trudeau campaigned on.
     
    The first affects business owners, including professionals such as doctors and lawyers, who have incorporated, and have effectively reduced their income tax burden by "sprinkling" their income among adult family members who may not be doing any work for the business in return. The government's proposal is to create a test to ensure any income paid to family members is fair compensation for work actually provided.
     
    The second aspect affects how corporations make investments that may be intended to benefit the owner rather than business but using income that is taxed at lower business rates than individual rates.
     
    The third is about imposing new limits on converting business income into capital gains where it is taxed at lower amounts.
     
    The changes were circulated in a discussion paper by Finance Minister Bill Morneau in July, with the Liberals always saying they were meant just for discussion.
     
    "If the Liberals were listening to Canadians, they would hear that raising taxes will keep local businesses from creating jobs, employing Canadians, and investing in their communities," Conservative Leader Andrew Scheer said Monday as the Opposition continued its attack on the ideas.
     
    Conservatives and other critics say business owners take risks others don't and don't always have access to benefits such as employment insurance.
     
    The Conservatives also say these changes will affect middle-class business owners, who fall into the same category of middle-class Canadians the Trudeau government claims to be working to help the most.
     
    The Liberals have countered saying their changes are intended to only go after the most wealthy using their incorporated status to pay less tax than Canadians who earn less money.
     
    Two new reports released this week on the issue provide fodder for both sides.
     
    The Canadian Taxpayers Federation notes people who make more than $100,000 account for just 8.4 per cent of taxpayers but pay 52 per cent of the total tax bill. This study also says the top one-per cent of tax filers pay more than one-fifth of all personal income taxes.
     
    On the other hand, the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives says just 0.7 per cent of Canadian families are going to be impacted by the government proposal to not allow businesses to sprinkle income to other family members.
     
    The CCPA also hit back against accusations the policies may affect women more than men. Their numbers say out of the 117,000 small business families who will receive any net benefit from income sprinkling, 98 per cent are headed by a man.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. Man Who Created Revenge Website Targeting Ex-Wife Says He Was Provoked

    B.C. Man Who Created Revenge Website Targeting Ex-Wife Says He Was Provoked
    VANCOUVER — A British Columbia man convicted of criminally harassing his ex-wife says she and her fiance insulted and taunted him in emails for years before he created a revenge website targeting her.

    B.C. Man Who Created Revenge Website Targeting Ex-Wife Says He Was Provoked

    BC Police Search For Man Who Stole Samaritan's Vehicle After Deadly Crash

    BC Police Search For Man Who Stole Samaritan's Vehicle After Deadly Crash
    HOPE, B.C. — Mounties are looking for the driver of a sport utility vehicle who stole a truck to leave the scene of a fatal crash on Highway 3 just east of Hope, B.C.

    BC Police Search For Man Who Stole Samaritan's Vehicle After Deadly Crash

    City Of Richmond Passes Policy Encouraging Use Of English On Business Signage

    City Of Richmond Passes Policy Encouraging Use Of English On Business Signage
    Councillors for the City of Richmond have voted unanimously to formalize in writing a policy that has been in effect since 2014 that directs municipal officials to push for signage that has at least 50 per cent English.

    City Of Richmond Passes Policy Encouraging Use Of English On Business Signage

    HATE IS WRONG: Jagmeet Singh Opens Up After Racist Heckling

    HATE IS WRONG: Jagmeet Singh Opens Up After Racist Heckling
    Jagmeet Singh has opened up on his reaction, which earned him plaudits, after a video, showing a heckler spewing ugly remarks at him during a meet and greet event, went viral.

    HATE IS WRONG: Jagmeet Singh Opens Up After Racist Heckling

    WATCH: Heckler At NDP Jagmeet Singh Event An Example Of Racism In Canada

    WATCH: Heckler At NDP Jagmeet Singh Event An Example Of Racism In Canada
    TORONTO — A political science professor says a racist heckler that interrupted a campaign rally for NDP leadership hopeful Jagmeet Singh is an example of the discrimination that deters minorities from politics.

    WATCH: Heckler At NDP Jagmeet Singh Event An Example Of Racism In Canada

    George Clooney On Hurricane Harvey Legacy: 'Houston Is Syria'

    The movie star made the analogy at a press conference to promote his latest directorial effort, "Suburbicon," at the Toronto International Film Festival.

    George Clooney On Hurricane Harvey Legacy: 'Houston Is Syria'