National Post (National Edition)

How to start restoring the Alberta Advantage

- Jason Clemens is the co-author of a recent Fraser Institute study on capital gains taxes and Ben Eisen is the director of the Alberta Prosperity Initiative at the Fraser Institute. JASON clemens And ben eisen

Until recently, Alberta maintained one of the most competitiv­e tax regimes in North America. In 2014, for instance, the province had the lowest corporate income tax rate and lowest top personal income tax rate in Canada and the United States. The Alberta Advantage, as it was known, has quickly been undone by both provincial and federal tax increases. To help restore that advantage, the Alberta government should consider capital-gains-tax reform.

Over the past few years, both the provincial and federal government­s have introduced significan­t tax increases. At the same time, the United States — Canada’s principal competitio­n for investment, entreprene­urs, business owners and profession­als — introduced sweeping personal and business tax reductions.

The economic implicatio­ns of the demise of the Alberta Advantage, and the province’s declining competitiv­eness more broadly, are evident throughout the province. Investment has collapsed while skilled labour and other workers are leaving the province. And there’s a general sense of economic malaise where vibrancy and entreprene­urship previously existed. On the most recent global survey of energy investors, Alberta ranked 43rd for its attractive­ness, with many respondent­s citing the province’s high taxes as a deterrent to investment.

Poor fiscal management by the Alberta government has produced continued large deficits and mounting debt despite some modest economic growth. So again, while a broad-based approach to restoring tax competitiv­eness is needed, including both personal- and business-tax-rate reductions, the option of reforming the capital gains tax, which investors and entreprene­urs are particular­ly sensitive to, is worth considerin­g.

Capital gains taxes refer to the additional tax applied to an asset when it’s sold for more than it was purchased — including, in Canada, the effects of inflation.

Critically, investors, entreprene­urs and business owners only incur capital gains taxes when they decide to sell their business, investment or asset. This leads to something called the “lock in” effect, whereby asset owners choose to hold assets — even if they could purchase higher-performing assets — simply to avoid incurring the capital gains tax. This effect locks capital in lower-performing assets and impedes investment in emerging and newer firms, which is vital in a dynamic and growing economy.

This is one of the many reasons why research continues to show that taxes on capital, including capital gains taxes, impose fairly large costs on the economy. Indeed, one recent study by the federal Department of Finance showed that each $1 decrease in personal income taxes on capital increased society’s well-being by $1.30.

There’s also a competitiv­eness angle to capital gains taxes. Currently, nine U.S. states do not impose a statelevel capital gains tax, including energy-producing states Alaska, South Dakota, Texas and Wyoming.

In Canada, while the capital gains tax is a federal tax, there’s a fairly simple mechanism by which Alberta could exclude capital gains from provincial income taxes. Currently, Alberta’s personal income tax return relies on federally determined income to calculate provincial income. The Alberta government could simply remove capital gains income from total income to arrive at provincial­ly taxable income.

The effect of this small alteration in calculatin­g total income for Albertans would be to exempt capital gains from provincial income taxes. Such a reform would send an immediate and potentiall­y powerful signal to investors, entreprene­urs and business owners — both in and outside Canada.

While other reforms are also needed (including more prudent spending, balanced budgets, lower regulation­s, and broad tax measures to increase competitiv­eness), eliminatin­g the province’s capital gains tax could lay the foundation for restoring the Alberta Advantage and returning competitiv­eness to the province.

CAPITAL-GAINS REFORM WOULD SEND AN IMMEDIATE AND POTENTIALL­Y POWERFUL SIGNAL.

 ?? JORDAN VERLAGE / POSTMEDIA NEWS FILES ?? Shoppers at the West Edmonton Mall.
JORDAN VERLAGE / POSTMEDIA NEWS FILES Shoppers at the West Edmonton Mall.

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