Waterloo Region Record

Morneau’s tax proposals still need work, critics say

- Andy Blatchford

OTTAWA — A coalition of industry associatio­ns says Bill Morneau must make more changes to the controvers­ial tax proposals he first unveiled last summer to ensure he addresses deep, persistent concerns in the small-business community.

The group, which came together in recent months as a vocal opponent of the finance minister’s tax-reform plan, is urging him to go further — beyond the adjustment­s he made to calm an uproar that dogged him for months.

The message was delivered to Morneau on Monday as part of the coalition’s first official response since the government announced several amendments last month.

“While we thank you for making progress ... we remain very concerned by the remaining proposals that appear to be moving ahead,” said a letter sent to Morneau’s office from the Coalition for Small Business Tax Fairness, which represents about 80 associatio­ns.

The changes to Morneau’s plan followed an onslaught of complaints from doctors, lawyers, accountant­s, shop owners, farmers, premiers — and even from some Liberal backbenche­rs.

They denounced the proposals, contending they would hurt the very middle class the Trudeau government claimed to be trying to help.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Morneau argued the reforms were designed to ensure they targeted wealthy individual­s who have used the incorporat­ion of small businesses to gain what the government maintained was an unfair tax advantage.

But following a consultati­on period, Morneau took steps last month to quiet the backlash by tweaking two of the three proposals and abandoning the third one altogether.

Amid the outrage, the government also announced it would resurrect a 2015 campaign promise to cut taxes for small businesses.

Trudeau promised to gradually trim the small-business tax rate to nine per cent by 2019, down from its current level of 10.5 per cent.

The coalition acknowledg­ed the progress but, after digesting and assessing the adjustment­s, it insisted the government has yet to go far enough.

“I’d say the level of alarm is still very high with respect to the package of changes as a whole,” said Dan Kelly, a coalition member and president of the Canadian Federation of Independen­t Business.

“I think that this is still very, very tender ... The business community has really only pressed pause here, it certainly hasn’t warmed up to the overall package.”

Morneau ditched one of the proposals related to converting income into capital gains.

The change, he said at the time, came in response to concerns the measure could have negative tax implicatio­ns for small businesses following a death and create challenges for owners who hoped to pass their family businesses to the next generation.

The government also announced it would move ahead with its proposal to limit the ability of owners of private corporatio­ns from unfairly lowering their personal income taxes by sprinkling their earnings to family members who do not contribute to their companies.

However, the Liberals vowed to simplify the proposal, which is set to come into effect Jan. 1, in response to concerns about its

complexity. It also removed an element that would have limited access to the lifetime capital gains exemption as a way to avoid negative impacts on the intergener­ational transfer of family businesses, like farms.

Morneau also scaled back what some believe is the most-contentiou­s piece of the taxreform plan — its proposal on passive-investment income.

The change, the government says, will create a threshold of $50,000 on passive income per year to ensure only three per cent of the most wealthy private corporatio­ns will have to pay higher taxes.

The coalition’s letter urges Morneau to postpone the income-sprinkling proposal until Jan. 1, 2019, provide more clarity on how it will work and, at minimum, consider making spouses exempt. Members are concerned that the change is supposed to come into effect at the beginning of January 2018, which is only weeks away, Kelly said.

He added that the coalition also wants the government to abandon the passive-income proposal.

The government plans to release draft legislatio­n covering the passive-income change in the lead-up to next year’s budget.

 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Finance Minister Bill Morneau is being urged to consider further changes to the federal government’s tax reform plan.
THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO Finance Minister Bill Morneau is being urged to consider further changes to the federal government’s tax reform plan.

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