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Canada must escape the corporate welfare trap

Charles Lammam   

Economy Industry Manufacturing Business Corporate Economy manufacturing

...to restore Canada’s business tax advantage over the US.

A business tax advantage helps attract investment.

It’s been more than two months since federal Finance Minister Bill Morneau said he would study Canada’s crumbling business tax advantage – while cautioning against any “impulsive” measures in response to tax changes south of the border that overnight wiped away a decade-plus business tax advantage over the US.

Yet, despite a chorus of warnings from business leaders and economists, politicians across the country seem unwilling to admit that recent US tax reforms have created a problem for Canada.

In reality, however, Canada’s declining competitiveness – especially vis-à-vis the US – poses a real threat to the long-term prosperity of Canadians. As our country becomes a less attractive place to invest, we risk losing investment dollars – and the resultant economic benefits such as increased employment, gains in worker productivity and ultimately higher wages – to more hospitable jurisdictions.

As of last year, Canada’s federal-provincial combined statutory corporate tax rate was 26.6%, compared to 39.1%  in the US. And when considering the effective tax rate on new investment – a broader measure of business tax competitiveness, which includes input taxes, credits and deductions – the rate gap was even greater (Canada’s 20.9% versus 34.6% in the US, according to calculations by University of Calgary economists).

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That advantage is now gone. US tax reforms lowered the federal statutory corporate income tax rate from 35% to 21%, allowed immediate expensing of capital investment, and created incentives to move overseas profits to the US. Together, these changes dramatically reduced the effective tax rate on new investment in the US to 18.8%, bringing the US rate below Canada’s (again, 20.9%) for the first time in well over a decade.

Without a business tax advantage, Canada will have a harder time attracting investment since the country is already hampered by higher personal income tax rates on professionals and entrepreneurs, a growing regulatory burden and a smaller market relative to the US.

But Canada can regain its business tax advantage without requiring Ottawa or the provinces to dig deeper into debt. So what’s this silver bullet?

Scrap corporate welfare and use the fiscal room to cut corporate tax rates.

Business subsidies distort the economy by giving advantages to particular businesses or industries, putting businesses that may be otherwise more innovative or productive (but lack the contacts or political clout to receive subsidies) at a disadvantage. Academic evidence finds that corporate welfare generally doesn’t stimulate the overall economy. Instead, it redirects resources from particular businesses or industries to those favoured by government.

Business subsidies can also irritate our trading partners, threatening Canadian access to foreign markets such as the US.

A recent study identified $29 billion in business subsidies – both spending and tax measures – from Ottawa and Canada’s four largest provinces (British Columbia, Alberta, Ontario and Quebec). The federal share represents $14 billion. Eliminating just $8.5 billion (60 per cent) of federal corporate welfare would allow Ottawa to cut the general corporate income tax rate by five percentage points, from 15% to 10%.

There’s really no excuse for Morneau not to respond to US President Donald Trump’s tax reforms. Ignoring the problem will further harm Canada’s investment prospects.

Click here for the Fraser Institute.
© Troy Media

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