Truro News

PM defends small business tax changes as doctors complain of negative impact

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Justin Trudeau got a small taste of the kind of grief his backbenche­rs have been getting over the government’s plan to end what it calls unfair tax advantages for wealthy small-business owners.

During a town hall meeting on Wednesday night, the prime minister was lectured by two female doctors about the negative impact they contended the proposals will have on hard-working middle-class Canadians.

Monica Penner told Trudeau that the tax plan will catch “thousands of really hard-working, honest, tax-paying Canadians” who have always believed that “hard work is the road to success.”

She questioned how he can explain to students why they should bother going into debt to get a university education when he’s proposing tax reforms that would “make sure everybody is the same in the end.”

Trudeau told Penner that the proposals are intended to eliminate tax provisions that “disproport­ionately advantage the wealthiest Canadians.”

“Let me be absolutely clear. There is nothing in these proposals that is targeting small, middleclas­s businesses,” he said. “There are a number of people who are wealthy individual­s who use private corporatio­ns as a way of opting out of big portions of the income tax system.

“So you get someone who’s making $50,000 a year who’s actually paying more taxes than someone who’s making $300,000 a year because they have private corporatio­n mechanisms and good accountant­s that allow them to get away from that.”

But Trudeau’s defence of the proposals did not forestall further complaints.

Anita Sanan, who said she went to school for 14 years and incurred a six-figure debt load to become a doctor, accused the government of creating “two classes of Canadians,” pitting employees against small business owners.

She argued that preferenti­al tax treatment for profession­als and small businesses that incorporat­e is meant to compensate for the fact that they don’t have access to pensions, vacation pay, Employment Insurance, sick leave, maternity leave and other benefits Prime Minister Justin Trudeau responds to questions during a town hall at UBC Okanagan in Kelowna, B.C.

enjoyed by employees.

“Now, you’ve moved the goal posts in the middle of the game and expect me somehow to be able to plan for my retirement, plan for maternity leave, which I will not be able to afford at this time and am having to choose between having a family and being able to actually practice as a physician here in Kelowna.”

Trudeau said he’s “fairly certain” that “every single province in this country” has maternity leave for doctors. Sanan told him that’s incorrect while another audience member accused him of lying.

In fact, according to the B.C. Medical Associatio­n, Sanan would be eligible for up to 17 weeks of parental leave benefits.

Trudeau said the current tax system has already created two classes of Canadians, where those who can afford to “create private corporatio­ns as a way of helping with their tax planning already have access to things that employees and others do not.”

“That’s not entirely fair,” he said.

He was careful to emphasize that there’s nothing illegal about taking advantage of those tax measures.

“There is no suggestion that you haven’t been following the rules. There is a suggestion that perhaps the rules which benefit

the wealthy deserve a little tweaking and that’s exactly what we’re doing.”

Trudeau also emphasized that the government is consulting on the proposed changes precisely so that it can hear people’s concerns and ensure that there are no unintended consequenc­es.

Trudeau’s encounter with the doctors came after Liberal backbenche­rs, who’ve been inundated with complaints, aired their concerns about the proposed tax changes during a closed door caucus retreat.

Under the three-pronged plan, the government is proposing to restrict the ability of incorporat­ed business owners to lower their tax rate by sprinkling income to family members in lower tax brackets, even if those family members do no work for the business.

It’s also proposing to limit the use of private corporatio­ns to make passive investment­s in things like stocks or real estate and to limit the ability to convert a corporatio­n’s regular income into capital gains that are typically taxed at a lower rate.

Notwithsta­nding the doctors’ interventi­ons, Trudeau received a largely warm reception at the town hall, attended by almost 2,500 people jammed into the gymnasium at UBC Okanagan’s campus.

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CP PHOTO

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