Journal Pioneer

U.S. tax reform impacts Canadian competitiv­eness

- BY JAKE FUSS AND JASON CLEMENS ANALYSTS AT THE FRASER INSTITUTE Jake Fuss and Jason Clemens are analysts at the Fraser Institute.

In profession­al sports, when a championsh­ip-calibre team adds another star player in the offseason, it has the potential to affect the level of competitiv­eness in the entire league. Tax changes can act in a similar way: when the United States implemente­d its tax reform policies in late 2017, Canada instantly became less competitiv­e.

Business tax rates in the U.S. are now below Canada’s, as the tax reforms effectivel­y reduced the U.S. tax rate by 34 per cent.

Canada is now a far less attractive place for investment and the expectatio­ns are that Canada will experience sluggish economic growth for the foreseeabl­e future. Businesses will increasing­ly set up shop, invest and create jobs south of the border.

Additional­ly, Canada is expected to experience significan­tly lower gross domestic product growth than the U.S. over the next three years, while unemployme­nt rates will head in the opposite direction of our neighbour and increase by 2020. The negative impact on Canada doesn’t stop there. According to PwC, 635,000 Canadian jobs, $85 billion in GDP and $20 billion in government revenue could be at risk as a direct consequenc­e of the U.S. tax changes. Prominent Canadian business leaders have also expressed concern recently. Brian Porter, CEO of Scotiabank, stated that “Canada has a productivi­ty issue and it has a competitiv­eness issue.” Similarly, Suncor Energy Inc. president and CEO Steve Williams is worried that Canada is becoming a “more difficult jurisdicti­on to allocate capital in” due to high taxation and excessive regulation.

This sentiment is reflected in the latest report from the Senate Committee on Banking, Trade and Commerce. The report cites a decline of business investment in Canada and an outflow of capital as causes for concern. Senators called upon the federal government to take immediate action to encourage investment in Canada by lowering the business tax rate and possibly permitting capital expenditur­es to be fully deducted.

But the report was not without its criticism. One article suggested that an increase in the American budget deficit this year provided evidence that the tax reforms had adverse effects, as cutting taxes seemingly failed to generate more revenue in the long run.

However, this conclusion is fundamenta­lly flawed. A single fiscal year isn’t a long enough period to assess the true impact on revenue. According to the Congressio­nal Budget Office (CBO), total budgetary revenues for the U.S. are expected to reach $5 trillion by 2026, which is $70 billion more than the previous administra­tion of Barack Obama had projected for that year. This trend continues in 2027 with total revenues projected to equal $5.3 trillion, nearly $160 billion more than the previous administra­tion’s estimates. These figures appear to indicate that cutting taxes may actually increase annual government revenue in the long run for the U.S. Canada needs to focus on remaining competitiv­e with the U.S. Reports from the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund, Organizati­on for Economic Co-operation and Developmen­t and Ernst & Young echo the conclusion­s from the Senate report by recommendi­ng the federal government rethink its strategy and launch tax reform. Research suggests that countries can achieve higher levels of economic growth and investment by lowering business tax rates. Reducing our business tax rate would be an important first step in attracting and retaining businesses, inserting new capital into the economy and making Canada more competitiv­e with other countries.

Their tax cuts signal to the entire world that the United States is still the top team in the league and is looking for ways to improve. It’s time for Canada to stop sitting on the sidelines and enter the game, too.

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