The Southwest Booster

Time running out as tax changes loom

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have been compliant with the law and acted prudently in the face of economic uncertainl­y and risk by creating a capital reserve through passive investment­s,” said Dan Kelly, president of the Canadian Federation of Independen­t Business (CFIB). “We’re asking the government to keep the promise they made to the small business community and protect firms with previous passive investment­s from the new rules before the budget is signed into law.”

To this end, the Coalition’s recommenda­tion to the government is:

· Do not proceed with the proposed changes to the passive investment rules.

If the government is determined to proceed, then they are urged to work with the Coalition and tax profession­als to ensure that existing passive investment­s are not included in the formula in determinin­g eligibilit­y for the small business deduction going forward. The Coalition further recommends:

· Implementi­ng a more gradual “grind” in eliminatin­g the benefit of the small business tax rate.

· Raising the threshold where passive investment income begins to affect a firm’s access to the small business rate from $50,000 to $100,000 to exempt more small firms.

· Indexing the $50,000 and $150,000 exemption limits to inflation to prevent small businesses from being subject to bracket creep on the taxation of their passive investment income.

The Coalition for Small Business Tax Fairness is the voice of more than 70 organizati­ons representi­ng hundreds of thousands of business owners, profession­als and taxpayers across the country. It was created last summer to fight the federal government’s proposed tax changes, which were announced in July and have been through several rounds of amendments since.

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