01) CANADA: TAX HAVEN FOR BIG CAPITAL
(The following
article is from the June 1-15, 2010 issue of People's Voice,
Canada's
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PV Vancouver Bureau
For years, right-wing think tanks,
politicians and corporate media hacks have complained that business
taxes are "too high" in Canada, supposedly driving away investors and
jobs. But a recent study from the business sector prove the opposite:
Canada is the second lowest taxation country in the developed
capitalist world.
If corporate
income tax rates
were restored to the 2001 level (28%), an estimated $30 billion more
would flow into the federal treasury this year. That could provide
desperately needed funds to expand social programs, extend and improve
employment insurance, build low-income housing, protect the
environment, and tackle other critical issues.
Instead,
massive tax breaks for
the corporations and the rich are adding to the burden on working
families. Federal taxes on corporate profits are now at just 17%,
heading to 15% by 2010 under the Harper Tories.
Canada ranks
second to Mexico
and far ahead of the U.S. on a list of "tax-friendly countries for
business", according to a report released on May 12 by accounting firm
KPMG. Netherlands is ranked third, followed by Australia, United
Kingdom, USA, Germany, Italy, Japan, and France.
In general,
businesses in Mexico
pay 40.1 per cent less tax than those in the U.S. Taxes in Canada are
36.1 per cent lower, or more than one-third. At the other end of the
spectrum, corporate taxes are 81.4 per cent higher in France than the
U.S.
Canada's low
corporate taxes are
"a huge competitive advantage when companies decide where to set up
shop," according to Greg Wiebe of KPMG's Toronto office.
"Business
has the ability to set
up manufacturing, distribution plants, and offices anywhere in the
world depending on where it makes sense. Having a competitive corporate
tax rate hopefully allows you to attract more business and investment
into the country which creates jobs," Wiebe claimed. "We're a small
country and have a relatively small economy. We need to take advantage
of anything we can to attract business into this country."
Wiebe and
KPMG did not address the negative impact of declining tax revenues on
social spending in Canada.
The KPMG
report tallies up the
cost of income tax, capital, sales, and property taxes, as well as
miscellaneous local taxes and statutory labour costs, in 95 cities
across 10 countries. The U.S., the largest economy in the world, is
used as a baseline.
While
personal income taxes and
sales taxes are still higher in Canada, payroll taxes have been
reduced, capital taxes have been phased out, and corporate tax rates
have been falling in recent years. Canada's overall federal and
provincial corporate tax rates are approaching 25 per cent. The U.S.
federal tax rate for business starts at 35 per cent, and state tax
rates vary.
And the
breaks for the business
sector will keep coming with the so-called "harmonised sales tax" to be
implemented on July 1 in Ontario and British Columbia. The HST "is
likely to enhance Canada's standing in the coming years," Wiebe said.
"The HST is quite a business friendly way of applying a sales tax."
In fact, the
HST is not actually
a tax in the traditional sense. Consumers will pay the HST directly to
businesses; none of the HST will go towards government revenues,
despite considerable and deliberate misinformation spread by the
corporate media and right-wing politicians. One "theory" advanced by
these forces is that taxpayers will ultimately benefit from larger
taxes paid by the companies which benefit from the HST, but since
corporate tax rates are being slashed dramatically, even this
"trickle-down" effect is doubtful. What is certain is that the HST will
immediately transfer huge amounts - $1.9 billion annually in the case
of British Columbia - from consumers to businesses. Working people who
can least afford this shift will be hit the hardest.
Canadian
municipalities are also leaders in cutting corporate taxes at the local
level, according to the KPMG study.
Vancouver is
rated the
lowest-tax city on the list; its U.S. neighbour Seattle is ranked
number 18. Nor is that likely to change under the Vision majority on
Vancouver city council, which claims to be "pro-people." A huge shift
of Vancouver municipal taxes is underway, away from businesses and onto
homeowners.
Montreal and
Toronto are in the
top five for lowest corporate taxation, far ahead of eastern U.S.
cities such as Boston (13), Philadelphia (14) and New York (27).
Low
provincial taxes in British
Columbia helped boost Vancouver to the top of the list, according to
KPMG, which deems the city highly attractive "tax-wise" for
manufacturing and corporate and information technology companies.
For research
and development,
Montreal ranked as the top Canadian city, taking the No. 2 spot behind
Melbourne, Australia. Sydney (Australia), Vancouver, and Manchester
(U.K.) filled out the top five.