The Daily Courier

Liberals seek to defuse anger over tax reforms

- By The Canadian Press

Changes to proposals aimed at clarifying wealthy are target

OTTAWA — Justin Trudeau will belatedly honour his campaign promise to cut the small business tax rate to nine per cent as his government scrambles to undo the damage from weeks of controvers­y over proposed tax reforms for private corporatio­ns.

The prime minister is to announce the reduction today, along with some changes to the tax reform proposals in a bid to re-establish the Liberals as the champions of middle-class Canadians.

That title has been tarnished in recent weeks as doctors, lawyers, accountant­s, shop owners, farmers, premiers and even some Liberal backbenche­rs denounced the reforms, contending they’d hurt the very middle class Trudeau claims to be trying to help.

The changes are expected to be largely technical in nature, aimed at more clearly targeting the reforms at wealthy individual­s who’ve used incorporat­ion of small businesses to gain what the government maintains is an unfair tax advantage.

They’re also expected to address concerns the reforms will disproport­ionately impact women, inhibit the ability of small business owners to save for a rainy day and make it impossible for farmers, fishers and others to pass their businesses on to their children.

The addition of a cut to the small business tax rate appears to be the political equivalent of a spoonful of sugar to make the reform medicine go down.

Trudeau campaigned in 2015 on a promise to reduce the small business tax rate to nine per cent from 11 per cent over three years.

But in the 2016 budget, Finance Minister Bill Morneau froze the rate at 10.5 per cent and cancelled a legislated reduction to nine per cent instituted by the previous Conservati­ve government.

Faced with an angry backlash to the tax reform proposals, the Liberal government is now reviving the nine per cent promise, a source, who was not authorized to speak publicly on the matter, confirmed Sunday.

Finance Minister Bill Morneau has acknowledg­ed that changes are required to address the concerns his reform proposals have triggered.

He’s signalled that he’ll ensure angel investors and venture capitalist­s, whose financing helps startup companies get off the ground, won’t face unintended consequenc­es.

And he’s signalled that he’ll make changes to avoid subjecting companies to additional, onerous red tape, complicati­ng the intergener­ational transfer of small businesses or hurting the ability of women entreprene­urs to save money for maternity leaves.

The Liberals’ popularity has taken a hit in some opinion polls amid the backlash to the proposed reforms, first announced in midJuly.

Today’s damage control effort begins with an early morning briefing for Liberal MPs, some of whom have been among the most critical of the proposals.

Trudeau will unveil the changes publicly a couple of hours later at an event with small business owners in Markham, Ont., accompanie­d by Morneau and Small Business Minister Bardish Chagger.

On Friday, Morneau acknowledg­ed that the government has to do a better job of reassuring middle class Canadians that they won’t be negatively impacted by the proposals.

“The fact that farmers won’t be impacted, we need to make that clear,” he said.

“The fact that, you know, small businesses will be able to continue to invest in their business, which is what we want, and won’t be worried about passing their business to the next generation, we’re going to communicat­e that clearly.”

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