
By Trevor Parry
Special to the Financial Independence Hub
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, in his dogged defense of what are the most fundamental tax proposals made since the report of the Carter Commission (which gave us our modern Income Tax system) claimed last Thursday that it is wrong that someone earning $50,000 a year as salary pays more in tax than someone earning $300,000 in their corporation.
Many tax professionals have dissected this ridiculous statement and could in considerable detail discuss where Mr. Trudeau was in error. In simple terms Mr. Trudeau would have you believe that the corporate shareholder lives in a different world where they are not affected by personal taxation.
According to the Ernst & Young tax Calculator an Ontario resident earning $50,000 would pay just under 30% on their income or $8,311 in taxation. The Ernst & Young Tax Calculator can’t factor in the value of a company or government funded health benefits program or pension plan.
If we turn to the corporate tax result, an active business earning $300,000 of profit in Ontario would be subject to taxation at 15%. We don’t need a sophisticated tax calculator to determine that this equates to $45,000. One should be baffled.
Corporate income also attracts personal taxation
Mr. Trudeau also is comparing apples and oranges. Does the entrepreneur who owns the business pay themselves anything? Regardless of whether they take income as salary or dividends it will attract personal taxation. Let’s say that they took a salary of $50,000, the same as Mr. Trudeau’s downtrodden employee. They would also have paid $8,311 in tax.
They might have had to pay themselves considerably more in order to afford an RRSP contribution, as it is highly unlikely they have a pension plan in place. If they decided to invest that $300,000 in their corporation any income or growth on that asset would be taxed almost at the same rate as an individual and when they withdraw the money as a dividend they would pay tax at the rate of 45.3%.
Perhaps the shareholder is as malevolent as Mr. Trudeau and “Red” Billy Morneau believe and they are deducting all of their lifestyle costs, including mortgage, food, transportation, vacations, toothpaste, etc. as a corporate expense. They would be guilty of tax evasion and the Criminal Code has provisions for dealing with that.