Medicine Hat News

Trudeau rejects calls to tax web giants

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MONTREAL Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is rejecting suggestion­s his government should have moved to tax foreign web giants in his recent budget, saying he doesn’t want to hurt Canadian taxpayers.

He said Thursday he won’t do anything that could cause Canadians to pay more for cellphone or internet service.

“We’re not going to increase the cost of internet service; we’re not going to impose more taxes on Quebecers, on taxpayers,” he said during a visit to a Montreal community organizati­on to promote this week’s federal budget.

“It’s a promise that we made.”

Some union and business leaders as well as the NDP have said it’s unfair that Canadian companies are faced with more taxes and regulation­s than foreign digital companies such as Netflix and Google.

Some have criticized the government for failing to take action in the budget to address what they say is an unlevel playing field.

The Canadian Union of Public Employees criticized the budget for “maintainin­g a tax bias that hurts Canadian businesses,” particular­ly in the cultural sector.

“Canada’s media and cultural industries are being severely damaged by the tax loopholes that benefit foreign digital companies and platforms at the expense of Canadian producers and workers and that cost the federal government at least $1 billion in revenues,” the union wrote in a statement on its website.

“CUPE has called for the government to require digital giants like Uber, Google and Facebook to collect and remit sales tax like any other business, but Budget 2018 is silent on the matter.”

Pierre Karl Peladeau, president of media giant Quebecor Inc., also issued a statement accusing the government of “choosing to turn its back on our businesses and court foreign online giants instead.”

The issue has been particular­ly heated in Quebec, where there has been vocal criticism of the Liberals’ 2017 agreement with Netflix, which allows the U.S. web-streaming giant to forgo paying sales tax by investing $500 million in Canadian production­s over the next five years.

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