National Post

Flatten rates, save money

- Charles Lammam and Hugh MacIntyre Charles Lammam is director of fiscal studies and Hugh MacIntyre is policy analyst at the Fraser Institute

Over the years, the federal government has shown a penchant for muddling the tax system with a myriad of tax credits, deductions, exemptions and exclusions. But tax expenditur­es — as they are collective­ly known — recently drew fire from Canada’s auditorgen­eral.

Specifical­ly, the auditorgen­eral criticized the lack of regular review on the relevance and effectiven­ess of tax expenditur­es, and identified a dearth of available informatio­n for assessing their long-term costs.

But there are broader problems with tax expenditur­es that fall outside the scope of the audit. Before we offer any solutions, let’s better understand the scope of the problem.

The most pressing issue, perhaps, is the ever-growing list of tax expenditur­es, which add complexity to the tax system. From 1991 to 2011, the number of personal income tax expenditur­es increased from 105 to 123.

And virtually every federal budget since 2006 has con- tained new or expanded tax credits related to a specific activity or group of individual­s. The credits cover everything from enrolling your child in a violin class or soccer to taking public transit.

At first glance, an abundance of tax credits may seem like a good thing. Everyone likes to save money. But each new tax credit can add to the complexity of Canada’s tax system and consequent­ly increase the cost of compliance.

Every year, taxpayers spend a significan­t amount of time (collecting and organizing receipts, understand­ing the rules) and money (paying accountant­s, buying software) to file their tax returns. The cost of complying with the personal income tax system alone is estimated at around $6 billion — or roughly $501 per household per year.

According to a recent study, taxpayers who claimed at least one tax expenditur­e (out of a list of 10) spent an average 20.3 per cent more in compliance costs (after controllin­g for factors such as age and income). Tax expenditur­es add to the cost of filing an income tax return since claiming a tax credit or deduction requires keeping records, ensuring eligibilit­y, and perhaps hiring an accountant to check that you’re not missing out on any tax benefits.

And compliance c osts fall disproport­ionately on lower-income Canadians who spend a greater share of their income complying. In fact, higher compliance costs might explain why lower-income Canadians are less likely to claim some tax expenditur­es or be aware of them in the first place. Independen­t research on the Children’s Fitness Tax Credit and tax credits for post-secondary education finds that tax preference­s disproport­ionately benefit higher-income Canadians.

A more complicate­d tax system is also more costly for government to manage. Both the compliance and administra­tive costs equal money that doesn’t go to investing in productive things that helps grow our economy or incomes.

Also troubling, tax expenditur­es t e nd not to change behaviour. Instead, they subsidize things people are already doing.

So what’s the solution? A simpler tax system.

Tax expenditur­es currently cost the federal government approximat­ely the same amount collected annually from personal income taxes ($130 billion). Indeed, with more tax expenditur­es, the government has to keep other tax rates higher to raise the same amount of revenue.

By doing away with at least 68 tax expenditur­es worth about $20 billion, the government could, in exchange, enact broad-based tax relief by scrapping the two middleinco­me tax rates (22 and 26 per cent). This would leave just two tax rates with an overwhelmi­ng majority of Canadians paying a single 15 per cent marginal tax rate and a small minority paying the higher 29 per cent rate.

These reforms would spawn a much simpler, progrowth tax system that improves the incentive for Canadians to work, save, invest and undertake entreprene­urial activities.

While the auditor-general highlighte­d important concerns about tax expenditur­es, the path forward requires more than operationa­l tinkering. The real solution is to simplify Canada’s tax system.

Scrapping dozens of complicate­d credits would produce enough new revenue to offset giving Canadians a huge income tax break

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada