Study
| EST. READ TIME 1 MIN.Reforming Canada’s business taxes could improve investment crisis and raise living standards
Boosting Canada's Competitiveness by Reforming Business Taxation
- Canada has an opportunity to change the way it taxes businesses and in doing so, could vastly improve the country’s attractiveness for investment, improving economic growth and raising living standards for Canadian workers.
- Specifically, the business tax system can exclude money reinvested by companies into new plants, machinery, equipment, and research and development, and instead only tax disbursements.
- The study suggests one way to reform business taxes would be to stop taxing all business profits, as is currently the model across Canada. Instead, only tax profit disbursements, which include dividend payments, share buybacks, and bonuses. Profits that are reinvested into the firm would face no business income taxes.
- This kind of policy change would encourage greater business investment, increasing worker productivity, growing the economy, and ultimately raising living standards for Canadians.
- It would also improve Canada’s tax competitiveness. Estonia, for example, only taxes business disbursements and does not tax earnings reinvested in the business. It routinely ranks at the top of the Tax Foundation’s international tax competitiveness rankings, whereas Canada ranked 24th out of 38 countries last year on corporate taxes.
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Trevor Tombe
Professor and Graduate Program Director, University of CalgaryTrevor Tombe is a Professor and Graduate Program Director at the University of Calgary’s Department of Economics and a ResearchFellow at The School of Public Policy. He received his PhD in Economics from the University of Toronto. His research explores a broad set of topics from international trade to public finances and fiscal federalism. He has published in top economics journals, is co-author of the textbook Public Finance in Canada, co-editor of the recent volume Fiscal Federalism in Canada, and is Co-Director of Finances of the Nation. In addition to his academic work, he actively advises various governments on wide range of issues and is an active contributor to Canadian policy development and discussions through regular op-eds, articles, and active media engagement.… Read more Read Less…
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