The Peterborough Examiner

Tax cartel a march to higher taxes and more corporate welfare

- FRANCO TERRAZZANO Franco Terrazzano is the federal director of the Canadian Taxpayers Federation. Troy Media

Canadian politician­s like Chrystia Freeland see tax competitio­n as a “race to the bottom.”

But for the rest of us, a global tax cartel will mean an inevitable march toward higher tax bills and more pork for companies with access to politician­s.

Freeland agreed to the American-led proposal for a global minimum business tax of 15 per cent at a recent meeting between G7 finance ministers. This cartel is being pushed by powerful politician­s to bully other countries into raising taxes so they can off-load the costs of their overspendi­ng onto job creators, their employees and customers.

“Democrats want a high global minimum tax that would end national tax competitio­n and reduce the harm from their huge tax increase on U.S. business,” wrote the Wall Street Journal’s editorial board.

The global tax cartel will open the door for higher taxes.

“It will merely be a matter of time before they ratchet up the tax rate,” said U.S. economist Dan Mitchell. “The next step will be harmonized and higher tax rates on personal income, dividends, capital gains, and other forms of work, saving, investment and entreprene­urship.”

This hasn’t been lost on politician­s. “This is a starting point,” said French Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire. “In the coming months we will fight to ensure that this minimum corporate tax rate is as high as possible.”

Internatio­nal Monetary Fund bureaucrat­s are now proposing a minimum internatio­nal carbon tax.

The minimum business tax would strike a blow against tax competitio­n. That competitio­n is the single greatest force keeping politician­s from indulging their inner most fantasies of raising taxes.

It’s not the generosity of grocers that keeps your price of bread low, it’s the threat that you’ll start shopping down the road. And it’s not the benevolenc­e of politician­s that keeps your tax bill from rising, but the threat that higher taxes will chase away investment and talent.

When announcing business tax cuts in his budget, former finance minister Paul Martin told Canadians: “we need a corporate tax system that is internatio­nally competitiv­e … these tax rates must be brought down to allow our companies to compete vigorously.”

Those tax cuts helped stimulate investment, and Canadian wages grew faster than they had in the previous decade and faster than growth in other industrial­ized countries between 2001 and 2012.

The cartel may limit tax competitio­n, but it won’t stop businesses from shopping around. Instead of lowering taxes, politician­s will look to woo investors with more subsidies and special privileges.

Canadian politician­s already love to shower large corporatio­ns such as Bombardier, Ford and Air Canada with tax dollars. The last thing taxpayers need is another excuse for Ottawa to roll out more pork.

And to no surprise, countries like Poland and Hungary have already said no to the minimum tax without special carve outs. China is also expected to want exemptions for its tech sector. Even the Organizati­on of Economic Corporatio­n and Developmen­t said there’s a case for excluding internatio­nal shipping companies, investment funds, pension funds and sovereign wealth funds.

A tax cartel will benefit the politician­s scrambling to pay their massive government debts. But for the rest of us, it will mean higher taxes and more corporate welfare.

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