• healthetank@lemmy.ca
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    4 months ago

    I feel like the rest of the sentence is important for those skimming for the important bits -

    together made 52.6 per cent of all corporate capital gains reported in Canada between 2018 and 2022.

    That’s a stupidly large percentage of the capital gains reported. The argument that capital gains tax stifles innovate is argued against in the report as well

    The report also finds there’s no historical correlation between capital gains taxes and business investment in machinery, equipment and intellectual property.

    • wise_pancake@lemmy.ca
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      4 months ago

      Wait… It turns out businesses always want to be more efficient, and whether they pay a tax they have no control over makes no difference?

      • WiseThat@lemmy.ca
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        4 months ago

        And in fact, increasing the tax on profits makes it much, much more valuable to reinvest in the business.

        Like, lets say your business is expecting a net profit of $200K after a year. You can either choose to reinvest that into the business to buy new equipment and hire new staff, or you can record that as profit, pay the taxes, and then put the after tax dollars money directly into your and your investors pockets.

        With our current corporate tax rate of 15%, it’s really tempting to just pay the 30K in taxes and personally keep $170k as take-home, which gets taxed at a MUCH lower rate than regular income, rather than keep it in the business. $30K as a fee to keep $170K in personal income is pretty cheap.

        However, if taking money our of the business was much more expensive, say 45% or something comparable to the marginal personal income tax rate for a working professional, then maybe as a business owner you might think that paying $90K to keep $110K is not as good a deal, and so you will think about whether there are other opportunities WITHIN the business you could invest in, putting those profits towards new equipment or training, rather than losing 45% of it to taxes just to add a small amount to your own pocket.