The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Finally, CRA obeys law

Canada Revenue Agency cannot be trusted to produce accurate, unbiased estimate of tax gap

- BY PERCY DOWNE

Since 2012, the Parliament­ary Budget Officer (PBO) has been trying to fulfil my request to measure the tax gap, the difference between what is owed in taxes and what has actually been collected, but has been stonewalle­d by the Canada Revenue Agency (CRA).

Therefore, the announceme­nt that the CRA has finally provided that informatio­n is welcome, if belated, news.

It is disappoint­ing, however, that it took so long and only happened because the PBO threatened to take CRA to court.

The PBO now has what he needs to conduct his study. That said, why should the PBO produce an estimate of the tax gap, when the CRA has committed to conducting its own study, and has released three minor reports on the subject since 2016?

The reason an independen­t analysis is required is quite simple: the Agency has been repeatedly caught trying to mislead Canadians.

The result is the lack of credibilit­y facing any sort of CRA produced tax gap report.

Below are just a few examples over the last years, from a very long list, of the CRA misleading Canadians:

CALL CENTRES

The Claim: The Auditor General’s recent report on the CRA’s call centres cited the Agency’s claim that 90 per cent of calls were successful­ly connected.

The Reality: According to that same Auditor General Report, however, it was revealed that the CRA achieved this high success rate by blocking 28.9 million of the 53.5 million calls received and excluding these blocked calls from their calculatio­ns. When blocked calls and other factors were considered, “the Agency’s overall success rate was 36 per cent.”

DISABILITY TAX CREDIT

The Claim: Historical­ly, 80% of applicatio­ns for the benefit by Canadians with diabetes were approved by the CRA. However in recent months, almost all previously approved claims have been rejected. Meanwhile, the revenue agency publicly claimed that there has been no change to the eligibilit­y criteria.

The Reality: Documents obtained by Diabetes Canada show a CRA email dated May 2nd, 2017 modifying the “variable for (Life Sustaining Therapy) clarificat­ion verses with a new variable.” In effect, diabetics who previously qualified for the disability tax credit were disallowed.

When confronted with the evidence of their misleading statement, CRA backed down.

“SPONSORED CONTENT”

The Claim: In February and March of 2017, articles appeared in newspapers and online across Canada extolling the work of the CRA. Bearing titles like “Federal programs in place to address offshore tax avoidance and evasion” and “How Canada is cracking down on offshore tax evasion and aggressive tax avoidance”, it was likely the best press the Agency had ever received.

The Reality: It was subsequent­ly revealed that CRA —operating under the premise that if you can’t earn good press, buy it — paid almost $300,000 for this positive “sponsored content” in six print and digital newspapers across Canada.

BILLION DOLLAR INVESTMENT

The Claim: A number of individual­s, from CRA spokespers­ons to the Revenue Minister herself, have spoken of the “billion dollars” that has been invested in the fight against tax evasion, implying that this money was already at work.

The Reality: The billion dollars is the amount the government has promised to spend over six years finishing in 2022. As of the end of the 2016-2017 fiscal year, less than $40 million of that $1 billion had actually been spent.

To this litany of exaggerati­on, misinforma­tion and outright falsehood, can be added the fake tough talk that comes from the Agency every time there is a public leak of informatio­n from some Bank or law firm operating in a tax haven.

Clearly, the Canada Revenue Agency cannot be trusted to produce an accurate and unbiased estimate of the tax gap, and Canadians are owed an independen­t analysis of the scale of uncollecte­d taxes in our country.

When the CRA fails to do its job and collect those taxes, the rest of us have to make up the shortfall. Canadians deserve an honest assessment of the extent of that problem.

The only way to get one is through the work of the Parliament­ary Budget Officer, and the fact that the CRA has finally agreed to cooperate with him means that, after six long years of delays and a threat of court action, that work can finally begin.

Charlottet­own Sen. Percy Downe has also tabled a Bill in the Senate requiring CRA to co-operate with the PBO in its independen­t study of the tax gap, and to report on all conviction­s for tax evasion, including a separate report listing all conviction­s for overseas tax evasion.

 ?? ADRIAN WYLD / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Parliament­ary Budget Officer Jean-Denis Frechette is the third PBO to repeatedly ask the CRA for the raw statistica­l data to be able to calculate the tax gap — the difference between the amount of tax owed to Ottawa and what the federal government...
ADRIAN WYLD / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO Parliament­ary Budget Officer Jean-Denis Frechette is the third PBO to repeatedly ask the CRA for the raw statistica­l data to be able to calculate the tax gap — the difference between the amount of tax owed to Ottawa and what the federal government...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada