Times Colonist

Morneau defends income-tax reforms

Says idea is to avoid having two classes of Canadians when it comes to tax rates, retirement income

- CAMILLE BAINS

VANCOUVER — Federal Finance Minister Bill Morneau says income-tax reforms are needed because small-business owners have an unfair advantage that could create two classes of Canadians for tax rates and retirement income.

He said the current system means business owners who incorporat­e their companies pay lower taxes while a second class of citizens ends up with a higher tax bill.

Proposed changes introduced in July would do away with “inappropri­ate” tax-planning methods and deal with unintended consequenc­es benefiting the “privileged few” whose numbers have grown significan­tly, Morneau said on Tuesday.

“We’ve had a 300 per cent increase in the incorporat­ion of profession­als in the last 15 years,” Morneau told reporters after meeting with small-business owners in Vancouver as part of cross-Canada consultati­ons.

Small-business owners in Canada pay the lowest income tax of all G7 countries and that provides investment opportunit­ies to fuel job creation, but loopholes in the current tax system aren’t sustainabl­e, Morneau said.

Incentives such as “income sprinkling” allow business owners to reduce taxes by shifting some of their earnings to family members who don’t have to work in the company, he said.

“Now we have a situation where a single woman who has two children, aged 12 and 14, and has the same amount of income as a married woman who has children who are 19 and 20, can find herself in a higher tax rate. So we see no reason why that should be so.”

But entreprene­urs say current incentives allow them to take on the risks of opening their own companies and that unlike salaried and public-sector employees, they don’t have a guaranteed pension or employment insurance protection.

Morneau said so-called passive investment income rules that allow a small business to build up a fund are unfair because that’s being used as a retirement­planning vehicle to defer tax on significan­t amounts of cash while others must abide by the limits of registered retired savings plans.

“If small businesses want to leave money in their business to potentiall­y invest in the future of their business, we understand and encourage that,” he said. “We just want to ensure that there’s no situation where they have a much, much better retirement income as a result of tax planning not available to other Canadians.”

Morneau said he’s against small businesses converting regular income into capital gains and paying half the tax rate, so that provision would also be changed. The consultati­on period on the tax changes will end on Oct. 2.

Conservati­ve finance critic Pierre Poilievre called on Morneau to back down on the policy reforms.

“Prime Justin Trudeau and Finance Minister Bill Morneau are creating two classes of taxpayers,” he said in Ottawa.

“What minister Morneau is proposing is not solving a tax avoidance problem, it’s avoiding a revenue shortfall problem. Minister Morneau has spent the cupboard bare and he’s now looking to raise taxes on small businesses to pay for it.”

Poilievre said Morneau has not explained a planned reasonable­ness test to ensure small businesses are legitimate­ly claiming the work of family members, and companies would be forced to spend time and money explaining themselves to bureaucrat­s.

 ??  ?? Finance Minister Bill Morneau speaks with small-business owners at a coffee shop in Vancouver on Tuesday.
Finance Minister Bill Morneau speaks with small-business owners at a coffee shop in Vancouver on Tuesday.

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