The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Holding CRA to account

Canada Revenue Agency in violation of both the spirit and the letter of the law

- BY SEN. PERCY DOWNE Charlottet­own Senator Percy Downe is requesting the PBO to take the CRA to court compelling them to obey the Parliament of Canada Act. Downe has also recently tabled a Bill in the Senate requiring CRA to report on the size of the tax g

The time has come for the Parliament­ary Budget Officer (PBO) to take the Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) to court in order to compel them to provide informatio­n necessary to calculate the tax gap, the difference between what is owed in taxes and what has actually been collected.

The CRA is required, under the Parliament of Canada Act to supply the PBO with: free and timely access to any financial or economic data in the possession of the department that are required for the performanc­e of (the PBO’s) mandate.

By refusing to supply the informatio­n the PBO has requested, the Canada Revenue Agency is in violation of both the spirit and the letter of the law.

It is important to note that the PBO is only requesting raw data, not the personal informatio­n of any taxpayer.

Other countries regard an estimate of the gap between taxes owed and taxes collected as a valuable tool in measuring the scale of the problem of uncollecte­d revenues. It also serves as a benchmark against which the effectiven­ess of both a nation’s tax policies as well as its revenue agency can be measured.

The United States, the United Kingdom, Sweden, Denmark, Australia along with a host of other countries see the value of measuring the tax gap.

There is a long establishe­d method of resolving such disputes, it is called the court system.

As it stands, the Parliament­ary Budget Officer has little choice but to pursue legal action against the Canada Revenue Agency in order to compel them to provide the informatio­n he requires — and for which CRA is obliged to provide him — in order to execute his duty to Parliament.

All this time and expense can be avoided, of course, if Prime Minister Trudeau directs his Revenue Minister to have the Agency provide the informatio­n to the Parliament­ary Budget Officer.

Regrettabl­y, years of stonewalli­ng by the Revenue Agency have prevented the PBO from making any progress in measuring the tax gap. Canadians deserve to know what citizens of other countries already know, that is, the size of their country’s tax gap, and how much money their revenue agency should be collecting. The Conference Board of Canada in their February 2017 report estimated the tax gap to be up to $47 billion. If the CRA collected that money, Canada would have no deficit, taxes could be reduced and new programs funded.

The reason an independen­t analysis is required, separate and apart from any report prepared by the CRA, is quite simple: given their recent track record, Canadians cannot trust the Canada Revenue Agency.

For example, a recent investigat­ion by the Auditor General of the Agency’s call centres revealed that their claimed 90 per cent rate of successful­ly connected calls (to an agent or the automated help line) was only accomplish­ed by hanging up on 29 million calls. When that factor is taken into account, the “success” rate drops to a staggering 36 per cent.

Similarly, the Revenue Minister has claimed that “we have invested nearly $1 billion over the past two years” to fight tax evasion.

However, the Minister neglects to mention the amount is to be paid out over six years and that, as of March 31st of this year, less than $40 million has actually been spent.

Even praise from ostensible outside sources must be regarded with suspicion, as was the case earlier this year when a series of media articles describing the CRA’s tough stance on tax evasion turned out to have been commission­ed by the Agency itself, at a cost of $288,497.36 - money that could have been used to actually fight tax evasion.

There are many hard-working, conscienti­ous employees at CRA, and it must be very discouragi­ng for them to have a management team that operates in this consistent­ly misleading manner.

Allowing the Parliament­ary Budget Officer to provide an independen­t estimate of the tax gap is long overdue, and if the Canada Revenue Agency will not provide the necessary data, it must be compelled to do so.

 ?? SUBMITTED ?? P.E.I. Senator Percy Downe
SUBMITTED P.E.I. Senator Percy Downe

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