Vancouver Sun

BORDER TAX PLAN LESSENS THREAT OF TRADE WAR.

But Canadian competitiv­eness still a concern

- JOAN BRYDEN AND STEVE LAMBERT

The Trump administra­tion’s decision to drop a proposed border tax removes the threat of a trade war just as Canada, Mexico and the U.S. prepare to launch negotiatio­ns for a new North American Free Trade Agreement, relieved Canadian business leaders say.

But it also potentiall­y reduces the pressure on Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to slash Canada’s corporate tax rate to keep pace with a promised steep reduction in the United States.

The border adjustment tax was intended to offset the massive revenue hole President Donald Trump’s planned comprehens­ive tax reform — including cutting the corporate tax rate to 15 per cent — will blow in the American budget.

“With this taken out of it, it will be interestin­g to see what this means for the overall package, what is the size of the corporate tax cut, for example, that’s been discussed,” said Brian Kingston, the Business Council of Canada’s vice-president of policy, internatio­nal and fiscal issues.

Kingston said a dramatic reduction in American corporate taxes “does create competitiv­eness implicatio­ns for Canada.”

“So, if they went to 15 (per cent), which is very ambitious, you could see a situation where the Canadian government would have to start thinking about how we respond to make sure that we don’t lose investment mandates to the south.”

American officials said Thursday they’re “confident” a tax on imports is no longer needed to pay for broader tax reform. But privately, some Canadian business leaders believe the decision to scrap the border tax means the promised reductions in personal and corporate taxes will have to be scaled back.

Little wonder then that Trudeau, whose government is already awash in red ink and could ill-afford having to match a U.S. reduction in corporate taxes, expressed satisfacti­on Friday that the border tax has been scratched.

“There is no economic relationsh­ip anywhere in the world like the one between Canada and the United States and that needs to be protected,” Trudeau said during a brief tour of cottage country in Kenora, Ont.

“The border adjustment tax would have been a serious impediment to trade with Canada and we’re glad that it’s not being moved forward with.”

Perrin Beatty, president of the Canadian Chamber of Commerce, said unilateral imposition of a border tax “would have been a very destructiv­e action to take that would have precipitat­ed a trade war” just as negotiatio­ns to modernize NAFTA are set to begin on Aug. 16.

That the Trump administra­tion has scrapped the idea bodes well for the NAFTA negotiatio­ns, suggesting the U.S. is backing off some of the president’s “extreme ideas” and that “common sense will prevail and that we will have a good and constructi­ve free trade agreement after tough negotiatio­ns,” Beatty added.

“We see this as a definite good first sign even before the formal negotiatio­n process has begun,” agreed Ashley Ziai, senior policy analyst, national affairs, for the Canadian Federation of Independen­t Business.

“We believe that the border tax would have had a detrimenta­l impact on trade and our relationsh­ip with the U.S.”

While scrapping the border tax may mean dialing back the promised reduction in the U.S. corporate tax rate, Beatty said that doesn’t necessaril­y diminish the pressure on Canada to relieve the tax and regulatory burden on business to stay competitiv­e with American companies.

At 15 per cent, the federal corporate tax rate in Canada is lower than the U.S. rate but, as Beatty wrote in a letter to Trudeau earlier this week, there are other factors — increases in minimum wages, escalating business fees, new carbon taxes and high electricit­y bills among them — that are already hurting Canadian companies’ ability to compete.

“It’s the cumulative impact of all of those things that are making our businesses less and less competitiv­e in the global marketplac­e at a time when others are upping their game and when our most important trading partner just across the border is moving to dramatical­ly decrease its taxes and regulatory burden,” he said.

With the contentiou­s border tax out of the way, Trudeau stressed that Canada will approach the NAFTA negotiatio­ns with the positive goal of improving the deal so it benefits all three countries.

THE BORDER ADJUSTMENT TAX WOULD HAVE BEEN A SERIOUS IMPEDIMENT TO TRADE WITH CANADA.

 ?? JACQUES BOISSINOT / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said Friday he’s glad the U.S. has decided not to implement a border adjustment tax on Canadian goods.
JACQUES BOISSINOT / THE CANADIAN PRESS Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said Friday he’s glad the U.S. has decided not to implement a border adjustment tax on Canadian goods.

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