Saskatoon StarPhoenix

Liberals to diminish scope of tax change

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The federal government is moving to pare down its controvers­ial tax proposal on passive income so that it will only affect three per cent of small businesses.

A senior government official says Finance Minister Bill Morneau will be in New Brunswick on Wednesday to unveil changes to his passive investment proposal so that it only targets unfair tax advantages used by the wealthy.

The official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, says Morneau will also share updated estimates showing there’s between $200 billion and $300 billion in assets sitting in the passive investment accounts of just two per cent of all private corporatio­ns. The official says the Morneau will also point out that dollar figure is growing by $16 billion per year as wealthy incorporat­ed individual­s reap unlimited benefits from tax-advantaged savings accounts over and above RRSPs and TFSAs.

The government is tweaking its original proposal after hearing concerns that cracking down on passive investment­s could adversely affect middleclas­s entreprene­urs.

The official refused to provide additional details ahead of Wednesday’s announceme­nt, part of a weeklong Liberal effort to calm the anger surroundin­g the tax proposals.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau had announced tax cuts for small businesses and plans to abandon part of one of the proposals to avoid negative impacts on the intergener­ational transfer of family businesses, like farms.

The official says the problem isn’t with individual­s, but the system, since it encourages wealthy Canadians to keep their personal money inside their corporatio­ns so they can receive tax advantages not available to everyone else.

The changes will not be retroactiv­e, and they will not affect existing savings, nor the income from those savings, the official said.

 ??  ?? Bill Morneau
Bill Morneau

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