Montreal Gazette

Entreprene­urs split on potential impact of tax plan: survey

Passive income cited as biggest worry, but income sprinkling seen as harmless

- BRIAN PLATT

A new poll of small business owners suggests their views about the proposed tax changes are less hostile than the political debate would have many believe — but the potential change to passive investment income provokes the most concern, with 55 per cent calling it unfair and 42 per cent saying it will hurt their business.

Meanwhile, a majority (63 per cent) say the proposed income sprinkling changes would have no impact on their business. Even so, 44 per cent say it’s an unfair change.

The proposed tax reforms, unveiled this summer, have sparked a firestorm of opposition from business lobby groups and Conservati­ve MPs. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau insists the proposals would simply stop the wealthy from getting unfair tax breaks by diverting money through private corporatio­ns, but opponents argue there are unintended impacts that will hit all small business owners, wealthy or not.

The Angus Reid Institute’s poll of 852 small business owners shows a more nuanced reaction. Overall, most of them think the proposed changes are unfair, but they are much more open to the crackdown on income sprinkling than they are on passive income.

“Small business owners do not react in a monolithic way to the amendments,” Angus Reid said in a news release, adding that the divide in views is “driven largely by the size of their own ventures, and the amount of risk their businesses are carrying.”

Income sprinkling generally involves naming family members as shareholde­rs and then splitting income among them to avoid higher tax brackets. The government is proposing a “reasonable­ness test” to ensure the family members are legitimate­ly earning the income through involvemen­t in the business (this test currently exists for paying salary to family members, but not dividends).

The poll shows 44 per cent of small business owners think the income sprinkling proposal is unfair, while 36 per cent think it’s fair and 20 per cent weren’t sure. Sixtythree per cent of owners say the income sprinkling change would have no impact on their business, while 24 per cent say it would have a negative impact.

Meanwhile, when it comes to the proposed change to passive investment income, 55 per cent of the small business owners feel it’s unfair, and just 22 per cent say it’s fair. Twenty-three per cent were not sure.

The government is proposing to remove the initial advantage a small-business owner has in starting an investment portfolio inside their company, rather than outside of it. Because small business income is taxed at 15 per cent, a small-business owner has more to invest if they keep the income inside the corporatio­n rather than draw it out, where it would be taxed at much higher personal rates.

Trudeau’s Liberals haven’t decided exactly how to reform this, but they’re essentiall­y planning to add on more taxes to passive investment income when it is withdrawn from the company in order to eliminate the initial savings.

Small business owners are evenly divided on the impact of this proposal, with 42 per cent saying it would hurt their business and 43 per cent saying it would have no impact.

Overall, entreprene­urs with five or more employees tended to be more likely to oppose the changes than those with fewer.

The survey was conducted between Sept. 13 and 18 among members of the Angus Reid Forum and Angus Reid Business Forum. A probabilit­y sample of business owners of this size would have a margin of error of 3.4 percentage points.

 ?? SEAN KILPATRICK/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? The Liberals’ proposed tax reforms have unleashed backlash from business lobby groups and Conservati­ve MPs. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says the proposals would prevent unfair tax breaks, but critics argue they will hurt all small-business owners.
SEAN KILPATRICK/THE CANADIAN PRESS The Liberals’ proposed tax reforms have unleashed backlash from business lobby groups and Conservati­ve MPs. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says the proposals would prevent unfair tax breaks, but critics argue they will hurt all small-business owners.

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