Democracy Gone Astray

Democracy, being a human construct, needs to be thought of as directionality rather than an object. As such, to understand it requires not so much a description of existing structures and/or other related phenomena but a declaration of intentionality.
This blog aims at creating labeled lists of published infringements of such intentionality, of points in time where democracy strays from its intended directionality. In addition to outright infringements, this blog also collects important contemporary information and/or discussions that impact our socio-political landscape.

All the posts here were published in the electronic media – main-stream as well as fringe, and maintain links to the original texts.

[NOTE: Due to changes I haven't caught on time in the blogging software, all of the 'Original Article' links were nullified between September 11, 2012 and December 11, 2012. My apologies.]

Tuesday, March 26, 2013

Canada Best Place In G8 To Pay Business Taxes

You may not like paying taxes, or approve of how Ottawa spends the tax revenue it collects, but if you're a business owner, you have it better than your counterparts in other G8 countries, according to a recent study measuring how easy it is to pay corporate taxes.

The study was done by accounting firm PwC, the World Bank and the International Finance Corporation.

For the eighth year, it looked at the tax regimes of 185 economies and considered three factors:

- How much a medium-sized business pays in taxes as a percentage of profit.

- How much time it takes a business to compile returns and submit tax payments.

- How many tax payments a businesses makes per year.

It used a fictitious sample business to calculate its results, making a set of standardized assumptions about the number of employees (60), years in operation (2), profits (gross pre-tax margin of 20 per cent), losses (makes a loss in first year of operation) etc.

Canada ranked eighth overall, up from 28th in 2010. Its representative business made eight tax payments a year, spent 131 hours compiling and filing returns over those 12 months and paid 26.9 per cent of its profit in taxes, a sharp drop from the 49.1 per cent paid in 2004.

United Arab Emirates was ranked the best and Venezuela the worst on the scale of relative ease of paying taxes.

Easier tax law compliance tends to correlate with better economic growth, according to Jason Safar, a tax partner at PwC's offices in Hamilton, Ont.

Over the eight years that PWC has done the study, it has noticed that across all of the countries sampled, GDP goes up, on average, as the difficulty of paying taxes goes down.

"There's a correlation between growth in the economy and easing the tax payment process," Safar said.

And GDP growth, he says, is pretty much bound to bring with it more jobs.

"You don't achieve that growth usually without more people being involved in productive activities," he said.
System could be even easier

Canada has made some improvements to its corporate tax system in the past few years, but complying with the rules is still no simple task, said Maureen Liviniuk, CEO of Edmonton-based Liviniuk Group, which provides accounting services to small- and medium-sized firms.

"I don't know any small business owners that would tackle a corporate tax return on their own," she said.

Liviniuk, who's also a director of Alberta Women Entrepreneurs, a support group for women in business, says the most significant improvement has come from business owners themselves, as they embrace technology, especially online processing of returns and remittances.

She was surprised that the PwC study found that businesses make only eight tax payments a year. In her experience, that number is much higher.

When payroll remittances, GST filings and, possibly, monthly tax instalment payments to federal and provincial governments are counted, it's more like 20 to 30 payments a year, she said.

And tax audits, when they happen, can be "very unproductive," said Liviniuk.

"It seems to take CRA (Canada Revenue Agency) a long time to complete an audit, going back and forth a number of times, asking for information that they may already have or should already have," she said.
Taxes a time suck for businesses

What's more, some cost-saving changes made recently by the CRA have not been helpful for business owners.

For example, the agency has switched to having tax audits conducted from any tax centre across the country, rather than one in the same jurisdiction as the business being audited. That means an auditor in Newfoundland could be assigned to handle an audit on an Alberta business.

The distance and time difference associated with that match-up often end up taking up more of the entrepreneur's time.

"It seems to be working well for the CRA, but it doesn't work well for the business owner," Liviniuk said.

And time is important.

The strongest correlation between higher GDP and ease of tax compliance, Safar says, was not with a lower tax rate but with less complexity.

Safar says it only makes sense that having entrepreneurs spend less time figuring out how to pay their taxes should be good for business activity.

"Paying taxes, and sorting out taxes, tends to be non-productive time," he said. "It's not time that can be spent making your business better, so to the extent that you can free that up, it has to be good for the business."

The CRA has said it is trying to make better use of technology in order to make filing still easier.

And the federal government has said it is aiming for a 25 per cent combined federal and provincial corporate income tax rate by the end of the year.

Original Article
Source: huffingtonpost.ca
Author: cbc

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