Close X
Tuesday, April 1, 2025
ADVT 
National

Carney confirms Liberals won't proceed with planned capital gains tax change By Craig Lord

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 21 Mar, 2025 05:03 PM
  • Carney confirms Liberals won't proceed with planned capital gains tax change By Craig Lord

Days before he's expected to call a federal election, Prime Minister Mark Carney is confirming he won't move ahead with a key Liberal tax policy.

The Prime Minister's Office says a plan to hike the inclusion rate on capital gains, first pitched in the federal budget last year, will not move forward.

The proposal was set to take effect on June 25 of last year and would have seen all businesses and individuals reporting more than $250,000 in capital gains in a year pay more tax on those proceeds.

The tax change drew sharp criticism from some tech leaders and professional groups and the Liberals never passed legislation to enact it.

Carney said after securing the Liberal leadership earlier this month that nixing the capital gains change would encourage Canadian business owners to take risks.

The Liberals say they still plan to raise the lifetime capital gains exemption for sales of small business shares and farming and fishing equipment to $1.25 million, up from $1 million, though legislation would have to come after the election.

The Canada Revenue Agency had planned to follow a long-standing precedent and administer the change even before it was law — until then-finance minister Dominic LeBlanc announced in January he would delay the measure.

The CRA said any businesses or individuals who overpaid capital gains taxes will be reassessed to address the issue.

The Liberals had expected the proposed capital gains changes — a pillar of the government's 2024 federal budget — would generate roughly $19.4 billion in tax revenue over five years.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Conservatives say there will be no media seats on Poilievre's election campaign

Conservatives say there will be no media seats on Poilievre's election campaign
The Conservative party is breaking from tradition and will not be allowing media onboard planes and buses for Pierre Poilievre's election campaign. In an email Tuesday, national campaign director Jenni Byrne says costs for travel have "risen considerably," as has the capacity for digital and remote access to public events.

Conservatives say there will be no media seats on Poilievre's election campaign

Liberals lagging well behind other parties on nominating candidates as election looms

Liberals lagging well behind other parties on nominating candidates as election looms
With a federal election call expected any day now, the Liberal party is trailing well behind its rivals on nominating candidates. The Conservatives have nominated 275 candidates out of 343 ridings, the NDP has 217 candidates and the Green Party has 208 — but the Liberal party has so far nominated just 185 candidates.

Liberals lagging well behind other parties on nominating candidates as election looms

Audit finds B.C.'s forest management hurt by flawed data without clear methodology

Audit finds B.C.'s forest management hurt by flawed data without clear methodology
The Office of the Auditor General of B.C. says in the report that defined methodologies to calculate forest carbon projections were not used for decisions such as the determining annual allowable timber cutting. 

Audit finds B.C.'s forest management hurt by flawed data without clear methodology

No charges for Vancouver officer involved in fatal 2022 shooting: prosecutors

No charges for Vancouver officer involved in fatal 2022 shooting: prosecutors
A Vancouver Police officer will not be charged over a fatal shooting in a city rooming house in May 2022.  The British Columbia Prosecution Service says in a statement the shooting happened at the Patricia Hotel in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside shortly after staff called 911 to report a resident assaulting others with a stick.

No charges for Vancouver officer involved in fatal 2022 shooting: prosecutors

Assault charges for man accused of bear-spraying Mounties in Nanaimo

Assault charges for man accused of bear-spraying Mounties in Nanaimo
RCMP have arrested a man who allegedly bear-sprayed two officers in Nanaimo. Police say they were called out Saturday afternoon to a report of a man throwing an axe into the back of a passing truck.

Assault charges for man accused of bear-spraying Mounties in Nanaimo

Inflation's surprise jump could push Bank of Canada to pause rate cuts

Inflation's surprise jump could push Bank of Canada to pause rate cuts
Statistics Canada said Tuesday that the annual rate of inflation accelerated sharply to 2.6 per cent in February as the federal government’s temporary tax break came to an end mid-month.

Inflation's surprise jump could push Bank of Canada to pause rate cuts