Close X
Friday, November 29, 2024
ADVT 
National

Budget Watchdog Says Cost To Match One Of Trump's Business Tax Cuts Is $37B

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 19 Jun, 2019 08:43 PM

    OTTAWA — Parliament's spending watchdog is putting new numbers to the cost of matching recent U.S. business-tax changes, pegging the price to the federal treasury at more than double government estimates.


    The parliamentary budget officer says in a report Wednesday that it would cost $36.7 billion over five years to let businesses write off 100 per cent of the cost of equipment and machinery from their taxes.


    U.S. President Donald Trump's tax changes in late 2017 allowed businesses to expense the full cost of depreciable assets, such as buildings.


    A year later, Finance Minister Bill Morneau's fall economic update allowed Canadian businesses to immediately write off the full cost of some types of machinery and equipment used for manufacturing or processing goods, and expense a larger share of newly acquired assets.


    The hit to federal revenues was estimated to be about $14 billion over five fiscal years, which the government argued was needed to help businesses in Canada stay competitive.


    In 2015, Canadian businesses spent more than $200 billion on new depreciable property, including buildings, intellectual-property rights, machinery and other equipment.


    The PBO report says if Canada matched the U.S. move exactly, there would be a decline of $8.8 billion in tax revenue this year — much more than the almost-$5-billion for the measures in the 2018 fiscal update — with annual foregone revenue falling to $5 billion after five years and then "decreas(ing) significantly" thereafter as the measure is phased out.


    The report also says businesses could also expense an estimated $164 billion in unused write-offs over the next two decades if Canada matched the United States, and reduce the amounts of tax they owe.


    However, the PBO suggests the government could recoup some of the money: Companies will have higher after-tax incomes that can be used for dividends to shareholders, which in turn would increase revenues from personal income taxes.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Convicted Hate-Monger Fires Lawyer; Sentencing For Your Ward News Delayed

    Convicted Hate-Monger Fires Lawyer; Sentencing For Your Ward News Delayed
    A convicted hate-monger who was due to be sentenced on Friday has fired his lawyer and will instead try to raise a constitutional challenge before he is sentenced in mid-July.

    Convicted Hate-Monger Fires Lawyer; Sentencing For Your Ward News Delayed

    Investigation Ordered Into Vancouver Police Conduct During Anti-Pipeline Protest

    Investigation Ordered Into Vancouver Police Conduct During Anti-Pipeline Protest
    The alleged incident took place outside a Liberal fundraiser at Vancouver’s Opus Hotel, where Prime Minister Justin Trudeau was speaking.

    Investigation Ordered Into Vancouver Police Conduct During Anti-Pipeline Protest

    'My Daughter Cries Out For Justice From Her Grave,' Manslaughter Sentencing Hearing For Ex-Pastor In His Pregnant Wife's Death

    Charito (Maria) Darvin told a sentencing hearing that her world caved in around her when she learned Anna Grandine — who went by her middle name Karissa — had drowned in her bathtub.

    'My Daughter Cries Out For Justice From Her Grave,' Manslaughter Sentencing Hearing For Ex-Pastor In His Pregnant Wife's Death

    Ice Cave, Carved From Receding Glacier, Collapses Near Haines Junction, Yukon

    A cave-like tunnel formed by a retreating glacier in Yukon has collapsed, months after hikers were warned to stay clear of the increasingly unstable formation.

    Ice Cave, Carved From Receding Glacier, Collapses Near Haines Junction, Yukon

    Raptors Ticket Auction To Benefit Family Of Hit-And-Run Victim Surpasses $10K

    The company that owns the Toronto Raptors says the price of a pair of tickets being auctioned off to support an employee whose son was the victim of a hit and run has surpassed $10,000.

    Raptors Ticket Auction To Benefit Family Of Hit-And-Run Victim Surpasses $10K

    Appalachian Trail Hikers Draw Strength From Story Of Injured Nova Scotia Woman

    Appalachian Trail Hikers Draw Strength From Story Of Injured Nova Scotia Woman
    A man who publishes a hiker yearbook for the Appalachian Trail says the strength and courage of a Nova Scotia woman who was stabbed on the trail is inspiring other hikers to continue their trek.    

    Appalachian Trail Hikers Draw Strength From Story Of Injured Nova Scotia Woman