Toronto Sun

Budget very troubling for many investors: Morneau

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Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s former finance minister said he rejected the idea of hiking the capital gains tax while in office due to concerns it would stunt economic growth, and called the move “very troubling for many investors.”

Bill Morneau was Trudeau’s first finance minister from 2015 to ’20 before resigning due in part to disagreeme­nts over fiscal policy.

He said Wednesday that raising the tax rate on capital gains means people are effectivel­y hit with a retroactiv­e tax increase, since they won’t get the profits they expected from investment­s.

In the federal budget published Tuesday, Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland unveiled a measure to raise the capital gains tax inclusion rate to two-thirds from onehalf, applicable to all gains made by corporatio­ns and trusts.

For individual­s, the new tax rate applies to gains over $250,000.

The measure is projected to raise $19.4 billion over five years, including $6.9 billion this fiscal year.

“This was very clearly something that, while I was there, we resisted,” Morneau said Wednesday, speaking in a webcast organized by accounting firm KPMG.

“We resisted it for a very specific reason — concerned about the growth of the country,” said Morneau, who now holds several roles, including on the boards of Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce and Novasource Power Services.

He said capital gains rates are something investors

“worry about a lot,” and the measure could have a chilling effect on investing.

“From my perspectiv­e, this is clearly a negative to our long-term goal, which is growth in the economy, productive growth and investment.”

Freeland’s officials have pointed out the capital gains tax inclusion rate in Canada has been higher in the past — it was 75% from 1990 to ’99.

More broadly, Morneau criticized the amount of new spending in Freeland’s budget, especially when stacked on top of big-spending budgets from provinces this year.

“We’ve seen significan­t increases in provincial government spending and that is obviously working against the central bank goals of reducing inflation,” Morneau said. “I don’t think there was enough effort in this budget to reduce spending, to create that appropriat­e direction for the economy.”

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BILL MORNEAU

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