Close X
Sunday, November 17, 2024
ADVT 
National

Canadians Dodged Paying Feds Up To $3B In Taxes On Foreign Income: CRA

The Canadian Press, 28 Jun, 2018 12:24 PM
    OTTAWA — Canadians dodged paying Ottawa somewhere between $800 million and $3 billion worth of taxes on foreign personal income in 2014, says a new federal estimate released Thursday.
     
     
    The study by the Canada Revenue Agency says the missing funds represented between 0.6 per cent and 2.2 per cent of the total income tax revenue Ottawa collected that year from individuals.
     
     
    So far, the federal government has collected up to $14.6 billion less than it would have in 2014, had all tax obligations been fully met — and that number is expected to grow as the agency's research continues.
     
     
    In previous reports, the agency has already released other estimates on the so-called tax gap — the difference between what is owed to the government and what was collected — for personal income tax and the federal portion of the GST and HST.
     
     
    The agency's next study will focus on domestic and international businesses, a report it says will provide CRA with its first estimate of Canada's overall tax gap.
     
     
    The latest numbers come as Ottawa invests more resources in analyzing and cracking down on tax evasion.
     
     
    "Most Canadians pay their fair share of taxes," National Revenue Minister Diane Lebouthillier said in a statement. "They expect their government to pursue people and businesses that try to avoid doing the same."
     
     
    The agency said Thursday that international audits it conducted between 2014-15 and 2016-17 uncovered close to $1 billion in income — and identified $284 million in additional taxes. In the process, it assessed 370 individuals, 200 corporations and a small number of trusts.
     
     
    The CRA analysis also found that in 2014, Canadians earned $9 billion in foreign income and held a total of $429 billion worth of assets outside the country — with most of it reported in the United States and the United Kingdom.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Winnipeg Woman Convicted In Dead Infant Storage Locker Case To Seek Bail

    Winnipeg Woman Convicted In Dead Infant Storage Locker Case To Seek Bail
    WINNIPEG — A Winnipeg woman convicted of concealing the remains of six dead infants is expected to ask to be released on bail while she awaits an appeal.

    Winnipeg Woman Convicted In Dead Infant Storage Locker Case To Seek Bail

    Justin Trudeau Disappointed By Pope's Decision Not To Apologize For Residential Schools

    Justin Trudeau Disappointed By Pope's Decision Not To Apologize For Residential Schools
    Justin Trudeau says he is disappointed with the Pope's decision not to apologize for the Catholic Church's role in residential schools and the trauma experienced by their students.

    Justin Trudeau Disappointed By Pope's Decision Not To Apologize For Residential Schools

    Sikh Man's Turban Ripped Off And Stolen In A Racist Attack In Ottawa

    Sikh Man's Turban Ripped Off And Stolen In A Racist Attack In Ottawa
    A Sikh man in Ottawa was dragged and his turban ripped by two white men who shouted racial slurs and threatened him with a knife in an apparent racist attack

    Sikh Man's Turban Ripped Off And Stolen In A Racist Attack In Ottawa

    B.C. Government Pledges $11Million For Thousands More Diagnostic Scans By 2019

    B.C. Government Pledges $11Million For Thousands More Diagnostic Scans By 2019
    Health Minister Adrian Dix says 37,000 more MRIs will be done by this time next year in the public health-care system

    B.C. Government Pledges $11Million For Thousands More Diagnostic Scans By 2019

    Parents Of Boy Who Drowned On First Day Of School Suing Saskatoon Board, City

    Parents Of Boy Who Drowned On First Day Of School Suing Saskatoon Board, City
    Kindergarten student Ahmedsadiq Hussein Elmmiwas found in a pond near Ecole Dundonald School on Sept. 11 after the morning recess.  

    Parents Of Boy Who Drowned On First Day Of School Suing Saskatoon Board, City

    British Columbia's Economy Is Forecast To Remain Strong Through 2020

    British Columbia's Economy Is Forecast To Remain Strong Through 2020
    Central 1 Credit Union says 2017 was a year of "stellar growth" and the positive momentum will continue in B.C. for the next 24 months, despite a slower housing market.

    British Columbia's Economy Is Forecast To Remain Strong Through 2020