Sunday, December 15, 2024

Canada Pressured to Respond to Trump’s Tax Cut Regime

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(Bloomberg) — Donald Trump’s planned tax cuts would wipe out Canada’s slim corporate tax advantage, likely driving more capital from the northern nation and deepening its productivity crisis.

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Canada’s federal corporate income tax rate is 15%, compared to 21% in the US. After accounting for provincial and state levies, the two countries are roughly similar, with the corporate rate between 25% and 27% in Canada, and about 26% to 27% in the US, said John Oakey, vice president of taxation with Chartered Professional Accountants Canada.

Trump has proposed slashing the corporate tax rate to 15%. He’s also pledged to extend his 2017 tax cuts, many of which are due to expire in 2026, including individual income tax reductions. While he may face hurdles in Congress, the Republican sweep of both chambers makes it more likely he’ll pull off his agenda.

His election “turns the heat up” on Canadian policymakers, said William Robson, chief executive officer of the C.D. Howe Institute, as the country “ought to be reducing the taxes that are the most punishing on entrepreneurial activity and investment.” That includes taxes on businesses and high earners.

“We need to break the glass on our tax competitiveness problem,” he said.

Canada’s Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland estimated earlier this year that the tax rate on new business investment would rise to 16.8% by 2028, more than eight points lower than a projected 24.9% in the US. Trump’s election upends that expectation. And her government’s decision to raise the capital gains inclusion rate in June to “make Canada’s tax system fairer” drew the ire of many economists and businesses.

Under Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, fiscal policy has been geared toward redistribution and has recently involved new spending on housing, daycare, dental and drug plans. That’s increasingly been funded by corporate taxes, which represented 21% of the federal government’s revenues in fiscal year 2022-23 — the highest in data going back to 1966.

“Directionally, it’s becoming more clear that the US is going in one direction and Canada’s going the other,” Oakey said.

Trump’s tariff threats aside, Canada is at a disadvantage to the US. The world’s biggest economy has more than eight times Canada’s population. The US also spends more on research and development as a percentage of its economy — 3.6% in 2022, versus 1.8% for Canada.

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