The Welland Tribune

Trudeau government’s small business tax changes won’t help the middle class

- CHARLES LAMMAM and JASON CLEMENS

The Trudeau Liberals were elected for, among other reasons, their commitment to a more prosperous economy, particular­ly one where the benefits flowed to the middleclas­s. Since coming to power in 2015, there’s almost nothing the federal government has done without first couching it in prosperity for the middle class.

To that end, the government recently embarked on a path to change the tax rules for small businesses with a focus on ending the ability of so-called “wealthy” Canadians to reduce their tax bill by incorporat­ing. The main reason to spend the time and money to incorporat­e is to gain a tax advantage between tax rates applied to individual employees and those available to small corporatio­ns.

The Liberal government’s hiking of the top personal income tax rate to 33 from 29 per cent made this gap larger. Indeed, the fed’s tax hike came on top of similar tax hikes in many provinces including Ontario, Alberta and New Brunswick.

The political uproar that emerged across the country opposing Ottawa’s small business tax reforms has triggered more back-pedalling by the Trudeau government. A number of tweaks are being made to the proposed reforms to try to exempt most small businesses, in effect “targeting” only the very successful small businesses. In addition, the government recently announced it will re-introduce the Tories original plan to lower the small business tax rate from 10.5 to 9.0 per cent by 2019. This was bad policy when the Tories announced it, and even worse policy now given the larger spread between personal and business tax rates.

It exacerbate­s the gap between tax rates for small businesses compared to employees, which as we explained above is the underlying reason people pursue these mechanisms in the first place. The real solution to the problem is to move to a lower, more uniform set of tax rates between both different types of income and different levels of income.

The cut in the small business tax rate means the tax wall small firms face as they grow and expand has increased. A number of research studies have noted how the enormous jump in taxes for businesses as they move from “small” to “general” is a disincenti­ve for growth.

The change in federal tax rates for businesses, given the announced rate reduction, increases by more than 50 per cent when a firm moves from a small business to a normal or general corporatio­n.

The tweaks announced recently to quell political and popular opposition to the Trudeau government’s small business tax reforms will discourage businesses from investing and growing, encourage more taxplannin­g through the use of corporatio­ns, and further complicate an already anachronis­tic and costly tax code.

This isn’t the way to grow the economy for middle-income Canadians or any Canadians.

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