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Tax cuts

The FTT: Part of the Solution

Erasing taxThe Financial Transactions Tax (FTT) has been attracting a lot of attention lately. While the Canadian government has stated its opposition to increased taxation and decided to pursue austerity measures instead, what are the implications for the economy and common good? Read more »

Building a Sustainable Recovery

Every year, the Finance Committee of the House of Commons receives submissions from Canadians on the federal budget, conducts hearings across the country, and submits a report outlining recommendations for the next federal budget. CPJ submitted a brief with our recommendations on Building a Sustainable Recovery for All Canadians. Our recommendations were carefully selected to emphasize job creation and sustainable recovery while not significantly increasing the federal deficit through a reallocation of existing priorities. Read more »

Should we tax the wealthy?

Does Canada benefit from attracting wealthy tax dodgers to invest in local business while enjoying the low tax rates of the “Switzerland of the North?” A story by Macleans business writer Jason Kirby this week argues that Canada should avoid the urge to tax the wealthy because these “Golden Geese” bring with them innumerable economic benefits. The article highlights how Canada’s comparatively low personal and corporate income tax rates, combined with its lack of inheritance or gift taxes, appeal to those super-rich who are tired of paying higher taxes elsewhere.

But while Macleans is singing the praises of low taxes for the high income, other business voices are sounding a message of concern about growing income inequality. In January, the Risk Report of the World Economic Forum called increasing wealth and income disparities a significant concern, linking the rising disparity to the evolution of most other global risks. Min Zhu, a special advisor to the Director of the International Monetary Fund, told the Forum’s gathering in Davos that “The increase in inequality is the most serious challenge for the world.” Read more »

Where has all the money gone?

Recently I heard the Anglican Bishop of Ottawa, John Chapman, speak at the AGM of a local community chaplaincy. Bishop Chapman described the evolution of community ministries from the rise of the social gospel to the heady days of the 80s when churches and other organizations had plenty of money and energy to offer community-based ministries and anti-poverty initiatives. And then, said Bishop Chapman, came the rise of global capitalism and the notion that the needy could be divided into deserving and undeserving, and retrenchment began. Now, we’re in a position where churches are losing their own staff. The pot of money available not just to community ministries but to churches is smaller. Organizations have to fight for enough funding simply to survive.

“Where has all the money gone?” I thought. “Why are all these organizations struggling? What happened to the money that was so abundantly available 25 or 30 years ago?” Read more »

BC's regressive tax system

In 2007, CCPA-BC economist Marc Lee studied tax incidence in Canada and discovered that our tax system had become an inverted u-shape, with middle-income Canadians paying the highest proportion of their income in taxes and the richest Canadians paying the lowest proportion of their income in taxes.

Yesterday, CCPA-BC released an even more disturbing report – a study of tax incidence in BC reveals that the tax system in BC is downright regressive. Not only does the richest 20% of British Columbians pay the smallest proportion of their income in tax, but the poor pay the highest! This shift has taken place over the last decade as the province has cut income taxes (which are still modestly progressive) and increasingly relied on regressive sales taxes. Read more »

Drummond on corporate tax rates: What difference do a few points make?

Don Drummond had a bit of a strange op-ed in the Toronto Star on Sunday. On the one hand, he acknowledged the debate over the option of corporate tax cuts and called for the impact of cuts to be monitored so that we know whether or not they are actually delivering on their goals. On the other, he reviewed and dismissed all of the arguments against corporate tax cuts as negligible. Read more »

Taxes and the Common Good

Taxes raise the revenues used to pay for democratic institutions and to provide government programs and services. Taxes can also be used to promote other economic and social policy goals through the use of tax expenditures.

Over the past decade, significant changes have been made to Canada’s tax system, including deep cuts to tax rates. The impact of these changes is a cause for concern. In this background research paper, policy analyst Chandra Pasma explores the changes and their impact, as well as policy options currently being advocated for to change Canada’s tax mix. Read more »

Trickle down's complete and utter failure

The OECD released a report last week highlighting the rapid growth of inequality in Canada and other rich OECD countries. The report covers the period from the mid-1980s to the late 2000s, meaning that this rapid growth of inequality took place during a period of strong economic growth. In other words, trickle down is a complete and utter failure – it’s led to the rich getting richer, not to a rising tide that lifted all boats.

The OECD report offers several reasons for the rapid growth of inequality. Not surprisingly, distribution of salaries and wages is primarily responsible (that’s not hard to figure out when the best paid CEOs make 155 times more than the average worker). This also reflects the growing trend of precarious labour, in which nearly one-third of jobs are low paid, part-time or temporary, offering few or no benefits, and provide no job security. The OECD report identifies globalization as a driver of change in employment structure impacting wages. Read more »

In praise of corporate taxes

There was an excellent op-ed on corporate tax cuts yesterday from an unlikely source: the Globe and Mail's Report on Business. Lawyer and business owner Tony Wilson argues that he's happy to pay not only a high personal income tax bill but also a high corporate income tax bill because he knows he'll reap the benefits. "My tax bills are huge, which is good," he says. Read more »

Using corporate tax rates to create good corporate citizens

The debate over corporate tax rates often seems to ignore the fact that corporations receive benefits for the taxes they pay. Those who demand corporate tax cuts rarely demand lower government expenditures that favour corporations, points out Greg Lang in The Mark News this week. But while the cynic might suggest that we eliminate corporate taxes and the free services corporations receive – including free road use – Lang suggests that there is an alternative way to think about corporate taxes. Read more »

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