Calgary Herald

U.S. tax reforms could hit Canada harder than NAFTA pullout, business groups warn

- ANDY BLATCHFORD

O T TAWA Business associatio­ns are warning that substantia­l tax changes in the U.S. could end up inflicting more damage on the Canadian economy than would the possible terminatio­n of the North American Free Trade Agreement.

While NAFTA’s uncertain future remains a top concern for two of the country’s biggest business lobby groups, they say much of their attention is also focused on the negatives of the recent U.S. decision to cut corporate taxes to levels comparable to those in Canada.

The warning follows on the heels of the Bank of Canada’s first public estimate on the impact of the U.S. tax changes on the economy north of the border.

This week, the bank predicted NAFTA uncertaint­y and the tax reforms would encourage firms to divert more of their planned investment­s from Canada to the U.S.

Ministers from Canada, the U.S. and Mexico will gather next week in Montreal for the latest round of NAFTA talks. It remains unclear what NAFTA’s fate will be.

The U.S. tax changes, on the other hand, are a reality.

Business Council of Canada president John Manley said he believes the fallout from the U.S. tax changes on the Canadian economy could be significan­t. “I think that’s actually a very big risk factor — almost as big, if not even in some cases bigger than NAFTA,” said Manley, who served as a Liberal finance minister in the Chretien government. “I think they are going to quickly need to think about what they do in the face of the U.S. tax reform. I don’t detect any appetite for lowering Canadian taxes on business, but I would be very surprised if Mr. Morneau isn’t already trying to figure out what he has to do about this.”

Manley said NAFTA is a big factor for business in areas such as the agri-food and the automotive sectors, given the extent to which the two economies are integrated. But for some other industries, any concerns about a few percentage points of tariff could be adjusted by exchange-rate movements in a single afternoon. “Taxes are not the only thing, but we did have a significan­t advantage in corporate income tax rates over most jurisdicti­ons in the United States.”

Canadian Chamber of Commerce president Perrin Beatty said the U.S. tax reforms should be a wake-up call to spur Canada into finding ways to make the country more attractive for both domestic and foreign investors.

It’s difficult to know for sure how the significan­ce of the tax changes compare to the end of NAFTA, Beatty said. “But it is significan­t — it was a serious factor before the Americans were able to pass tax reform,” Beatty, a former Mulroney cabinet minister, said of the tax overhaul. “I believe that urgently the federal government should be pulling together the provinces and municipali­ties to address this issue of the tax and regulatory burden — and say, ‘ What can we do in Canada to ensure that we remain competitiv­e?’ ”

Canada is headed in the wrong direction by driving up costs on businesses through recent changes such as tax reforms on private corporatio­ns, minimum wage increases and other regulatory hurdles, Beatty argued.

The federal government, meanwhile, continues to insist Canada has advantages such as an educated workforce and a very competitiv­e tax rate among G7 countries, even after the U.S. reforms.

“Our government has been and will continue to carefully assess details of the bill south of the border, and we will consider its implicatio­ns carefully,” Chloe Luciani- Girouard, a spokeswoma­n for federal Finance Minister Bill Morneau, wrote in an email Friday.

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