Showing posts with label Stephane Dion. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Stephane Dion. Show all posts

Monday, September 22, 2008

Harper vows to keep income trust tax

Reuters
Mon Sept 22, 2008 11:55am EDT


OTTAWA (Reuters) - Prime Minister Stephen Harper ruled out any reversal of his government's surprise decision in October 2006 to impose a tax on distributions from income trusts, which had become popular investment vehicles.

Harper, campaigning before the October 14 general election, told reporters in Ottawa on Monday that the Conservative government was "forced" to change the income trust rules because corporations were increasingly converting to the tax-sheltered structure, avoiding tax payments to Ottawa.

The main opposition Liberal Party said on Monday that, if it forms the next government, it would replace the planned 31.5 percent tax with a smaller 10 percent rate. Its tax would be refundable for Canadian residents, leaving foreign investors to pay it, and the party projected the tax would bring in C$1 billion in revenue over four years.

But Harper suggested that the other political parties would come to the same conclusion the Conservatives did: changing the tax structure was necessary to stabilize the market.

"Any party that is suggesting it will reverse that is not telling the truth. They will find, and they know just as we knew, that they will have to reverse course," Harper said.

The Conservatives shocked market participants with the Halloween 2006 announcement of the new rules, and market activity that had been driven by income trusts screeched to a stop.

Two of Canada's biggest corporations, telecoms companies Telus Corp and BCE Inc, halted plans to convert into trusts, the Canadian initial public offering market dried up, and BCE has since agreed to be acquired by a private-equity consortium.

Harper also said the government created "very generous" transition arrangements.

"We've allowed income trusts to double in size in the transition period and those taxes actually don't come into effect until 2011, so no income trust has in fact paid any tax," he said.

Related:
Liberals vow to scrap tax on trusts - Globe and Mail

An autopsy of the Telus - BCE deal. How the Harper government favoured Private Equity and turned it's back on Canadian investors.

The environment has now turned quite good for Private Equity

The Conservatives have committed the biggest blunder I've seen in 42 years of business involvement - Seymour Schulich, September 11, 2007

Friday, September 12, 2008

Help Brent Fullard and the Liberals clean up Flaherty's financial mess

Support Brent now. Click here to make your donation.

Brent Fullard invites Canadians from Whitby-Oshawa and all regions of Canada to join his fight against Jim Flaherty and the Conservative government’s dismal mismanagement of the country’s finances.


“Canada’s economy is the worst in the G7. Canada has now had its worst performance in 17 years – since Brian Mulroney. The economy is slumping. Hard working Canadians are losing their jobs and what does this government do? Insult them and abandon them with laissez-faire, I don’t care policies,” according to Mr. Dion.

“Conservatives do not understand the 21st century economy. The cost of fossil fuels is only going to go up. The only long term solution is to invest in the green economy and renewable alternatives. The Conservative short-sighted approach will only delay the inevitable.

“A Liberal government will invest in partnership with Canadians by cutting taxes for families, investing in the manufacturing sector and building strong jobs. By building Canada as a leader in the green economy we will build a strong economy for today and the next generation.”

Mr. Dion made his comments at a Liberal rally with Ajax-Pickering MP Mark Holland and was joined by Liberal Finance Critic John McCallum and Associate Finance Critic Martha Hall Findlay in welcoming the newest member of the Liberal team, candidate Brent Fullard, who is running in Mr. Flaherty’s riding of Whitby-Oshawa.

Mr. Fullard founded the Canadian Association of Income Trust Investors to fight Mr. Flaherty's decision to tax income trusts after the Conservatives promised not to.

“As a former General Motors employee and leading income trust investor advocate, Mr. Fullard knows all too well how Mr. Flaherty and his government have betrayed and abandoned Canadians,” said Mr. Holland. “Mr. Flaherty and his Prime Minister left investors bleeding and auto workers unemployed. This is not good economic management.

“It was a Liberal government that swept up after the last Conservative government, and we will do it again. We will build on our party’s solid history of job creation, balanced budgets and progressive tax cuts – working with Canadians, not against them.”

Mr. McCallum pointed out how in the dying days of the Harper government, Conservatives racked up almost $9 billion in pre-election spending promises – including a couple of funding announcements for the ailing auto sector.

“This government thinks it can ignore the auto sector for two-and-a-half years and then make a photo-op announcement on the eve of an election and everything will be alright,” said Mr. McCallum. “This is the same government that, prior to the writ dropping, refused to make investments in auto sector capital and innovation, calling them ‘band-aid solutions.’ The result of that negligence has been devastating, and nowhere has that devastation been felt more than in this region of Ontario.”

Ms. Hall Findlay said that while Ontario sits in the midst of the biggest economic downturn in years, Minister Flaherty does nothing but attack his home province.

“He called Ontario ‘the last place to invest’ and Premier Dalton McGuinty the ‘small man of Confederation’ for defending the principles of democracy,” she said. “He told Ontario mayors that he was not in the ‘pothole business’ and dismissed the huge infrastructure deficit they face by calling them ‘whiners.’

“The residents of Ontario – and all of Canada – need a government that is going to stick by them and work with them every day to find long-term solutions, not sit back and insult them in their time of need,” she said.

Mr. Fullard said he was proud to be joining the Liberal team because of Mr. Dion’s plan to build the Canada of the future through partnership with Canadian businesses.

“Canadians have had enough of Mr. Flaherty’s broken promises,” he said. “The income trust fiasco – which cost investors some $35 billion – is just one of a string of betrayals that Mr. Flaherty is going to have to explain to the residents of Whitby-Oshawa. Even worse is that this broken promise is predicated on the false premise that income trusts cause tax leakage.”

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Thursday, August 14, 2008

Income Trusters in Toronto area, here is your chance to meet Dion.

The Liberal Party developed an Income Trust Policy in an effort to counter the damage done by Harper's Conservatives.

Here is your chance to ask Stephane Dion your questions about the plan to make Income Trusts a viable option for Canadian Investors again.


Garth Turner hosts Dion at major public forum

Citizens will be asked for views on economy, environment

Federal Liberal leader Stephane Dion is coming August 20th, to meet the people. Hosted by MP Garth Turner, Dion will be centre stage at an important Town hall meeting in which citizens can ask him about the big issues facing southern Ontario, and Canada.

"Now that Stephen Harper has threatened an election in a few months," Turner says, "it's key that people know where our leaders stand. Stephane Dion is the only one making this effort to get out and ask us all what kind of Canada we want, and how best to cope with the problems which need urgent solutions. I'm encouraging everyone – Liberal supporters or critics – to come and make up their own minds."

Turner cites recent job losses in the manufacturing sector as a priority, along with rising energy costs, falling real estate values and mounting family financial stress. He also says Dion will be outlining his Green Shift proposal, which would see personal income taxes slashed, and taxes imposed instead on polluters responsible in part for climate change.

"Dion has won the admiration of people across the country for meeting real voters face-to-face," Turner says. "He's not afraid of the tough questions we should all be asking of our politicians, now that the economy's turned sour and the federal government seems to be drifting. This is a chance for everyone in the region to get out and make their voices heard, so policy in Ottawa can better mirror public wishes."

The Town Hall meeting takes place Wednesday, August 20th at 7:30 pm.

Location: SVCC Hall (St. Volodymyr). 1280 Dundas Street, Oakville (between Trafalgar Rd. and Bronte Rd.).

Admission is free, and seating is on a first come-first served basis.

Seats may be reserved by calling (905) 693-0166, or emailing mp@garth.ca.

For more information:
Esther Shaye (905) 693-0166

MEDIA NOTE: Media availability with Stephane Dion will be provided. Details to follow.

Wednesday, October 24, 2007

Why Leaders Fail



A leader's credibility is the result of two aspects: what he or she does (competency) and who he or she is (character). A discrepancy between these two aspects creates an integrity problem.

The highest principle of leadership is integrity. When integrity ceases to be a leader's top priority, when a compromise of ethics is rationalized away as necessary for the "greater good," when achieving results becomes more important than the means to their achievement -- that is the moment when a leader steps onto the slippery slop of failure.

Often such leaders see their followers as pawns, a mere means to an end, thus confusing manipulation with leadership. These leaders lose empathy. They cease to be people "perceivers" and become people "pleasers," using popularity to ease the guilt of lapsed integrity.
Source: Mark Sanborn, CSP, CPAE

Related:
The only thing a politician has is his word. A message to Stephen Harper from Ralph Klein

Wednesday, October 17, 2007

Creating a Canadian Corporate Advantage - Dion speech to the Economic Club of Toronto

Excerpt from Oct 12 Speech:

Our fourth priority for the Speech from the Throne is a plan to create a strong Canadian economy. And…surprise, surprise that is what I want to talk to you about today, here at the Economic Club of Toronto. How to generate more investment, higher living standards, and good jobs for ourselves and our children. I want to thank the Economic Club for giving me the opportunity to talk about this issue.

We need this plan, especially given the fact that the Harper government has done more harm than good to Canada’s competitive position.

They are in the process of squandering $12 billion per year to pay for their two point cut in the GST, money that could otherwise have been used far more productively.

Their original interest deductibility proposal was a frontal attack on the competitiveness of Canadian companies and denounced as the worst tax policy in 35 years. As reported in the press yesterday, their new version of interest deductibility will still cost Canadian companies billions and will serve mainly to enrich foreign governments. It is beyond belief. The Prime Minister has not listened to common sense. It is not too late for him to do so.

We expect the Speech from the Throne to address economic measures including infrastructure, post secondary education, research and development, the manufacturing sector, labour market shortages and middle class tax relief.

But today, I want to talk about an important policy I believe Canada needs to create more investment. To create rising living standards. To create the jobs of tomorrow in the Canada of today. To create a competitive tax system. To create a Canadian corporate advantage.

I am talking about the necessity to further reduce the federal corporate tax rate, deeper than has been already announced.

The previous Liberal government reduced the federal corporate tax rate from 28% to 19%. The Conservatives took the “bold step” of going further…to 18.5% in 2011. I would go deeper than that and I will tell you why.

My conviction that corporate tax cuts must be on Canada’s economic agenda has been strengthened by a process of consultation with parliamentary colleagues, workers and Canadians who want better jobs for themselves and their children. I am convinced that a further reduction in the corporate tax rate cut is the right thing to do.

My conviction has been reinforced by what I have heard from experts and business leaders at round tables and other forums across the country. I am thinking in particular of the outstanding Montreal conference of September 10th where experts and business leaders seemed to speak with one voice – but in both official languages! - a lower corporate tax rate is a powerful weapon in the federal government’s arsenal to generate more investment, higher living standards and better jobs.

It is true that business leaders I have spoken to have also called for an extension of the Accelerated Capital Cost Allowance for manufacturing and processing industries. This is especially true with a Canadian dollar at par. It has never been more affordable for Canadian businesses to invest in new machinery and equipment. But today I will focus on the corporate tax.

I will give you three reasons why we must deepen the cuts to the corporate tax rate. It is a good economic policy as such within the Canadian economy. Second, it will help us compete with other countries. Third, it will strengthen our economic sovereignty. Let’s develop these three points.

It is a good policy for an economy like Canada’s. Why? Because living standards are driven mainly by productivity. Productivity is driven mainly by investment. How, for the sake of good jobs and rising living standards, can we encourage Canadian companies to increase their investments?

The answer is simple. If you lower the corporate tax rate, you lower the cost of capital for Canadian companies. Therefore, these companies are induced to spend more on capital equipment.

It is important for Canada to increase capital spending. Right now we are not doing very well. In fact, Canadian companies invest $1600 per worker less than US firms and $700 per worker less than the OECD average.

This brings me to my second point, competing with other countries. Today the Canadian dollar is at around par with the United States. A low Canadian dollar was at best a mixed blessing, but it did create a competitive advantage for our exports and an inducement for companies to locate in this country. How, for the sake of good jobs and rising living standards, can we create a new Canadian advantage that relies on something other than a weak currency?

By now it is clear that my answer is to create a new Canadian advantage based on a lower corporate tax rate.

Some may question why Canada needs a specific advantage to win in global competition. The answer is that every country seeks an advantage and that Canada especially needs one given the fact that our neighbour is the world’s largest economy.

As a destination for investment in North America, Canada is not top of mind. As the world’s only superpower, the United States is always top of mind. So we need a big hook to snare investment, including Canadian investment, that might otherwise go south of the border.

We already have some good arguments for investing in Canada – for example, our skilled work force, our internationally respected status as a nation, our successful multicultural and bilingual society. But corporations are oriented to the bottom line, and one of my biggest hooks as a future Prime Minister would go straight to the bottom line: come to Canada and you pay a much lower corporate tax than in the United States.

How would the United States react to this Canadian advantage? It could after all match Canada’s corporate tax reduction. But here’s a case where Canada’s small size is an advantage. If Canada creates a big corporate tax gap vis a vis the United States, there is unlikely to be any reaction south of the border. We’re under the US radar screen because we’re small.

My third and final argument for a lower corporate tax rate is that it would strengthen Canadian companies against foreign takeover. We want our companies to be predators rather than prey. The best way to do that, for the sake of good head office jobs and other benefits, is to strengthen our companies by taxing them less. It lowers their cost of capital. It better equips them to take on the world.

To conclude, let me sum up the argument. A key competitive advantage for Canada used to be our weak currency. Now that our dollar is at par, and we have lost this weak currency advantage, a key advantage must be a competitive corporate tax rate.

A tax advantage is better than a weak currency advantage. I can’t think of a country that has succeeded on the basis of a weak currency. But I can name several countries, including Sweden, Denmark, and Ireland, that have done very well by creating a low corporate tax environment.

I would much rather be the Prime Minister of a country that grows investment and good jobs through a competitive tax regime than a country that aspires to greatness through a devalued currency.

Some will say that a cut in corporate taxes is a right wing policy. I’m sure my friend Jack Layton will say this. But to believe this is to believe that Sweden, with its low corporate tax rate, is the hot bed of neo-conservatism while the United States, with its very high corporate tax rate, is a socialist paradise – or to quote Stephen Harper when he described Canada – “a second tier socialistic country”. A low corporate tax rate is not a right wing policy or a left wing policy. It is a sound policy.

The world does not owe Canada a living. For a richer, fairer, greener Canada we need to create a Canadian corporate advantage. We need a more competitive Canada.


Read the complete speech

Thursday, October 11, 2007

Stéphane Dion speaks to the Edmonton Chamber of Commerce

Excerpt from Oct 10 Speech:

"In eleven years in politics, I have never broken my word. I will be a Prime Minister that you can trust. And speaking of trusts, let us talk about income trusts. As Prime Minister, I would never have assured investors, particularly our country’s seniors that it was safe to invest in income trusts if I didn’t mean it. Stephen Harper promised you he would not tax income trusts. But on Halloween last year, the Prime Minister imposed a punitive 31.5 per cent tax, immediately wiping out $25 billion of Canadians’ savings.

Imagine saving carefully your whole life only to see your hard-earned money vanish in one night because of a politician’s broken promise.

In the past year, we have seen many of Alberta’s strongest companies taken over by foreigners, after being weakened by the same broken promise.

Only last May, we urged the government to do something about foreign takeovers. They completely ignored our call, accusing us of being protectionist. Finally, yesterday they started to move and why? Because they know we were right and perceived as such by Canadian voters.

Now that the government is finally acting they must go further and adopt the Liberal income trust plan to fix the mess they created.

As many of you know, we have proposed to replace Harper’s punitive 31.5 per cent tax with a more modest 10 per cent tax that is refundable for Canadian investors. Experts like Yves Fortin have said that our plan will more than reverse any potential tax leakage. Gordon Tait of BMO Capital Markets and Dirk Lever of RBC Capital Markets agree we will restore up to two thirds of investors’ lost value. Unfortunately this plan can only help those trusts that have not been taken over since Halloween of last year. The longer we wait to adopt the Liberal plan, the worse it will get."


Read the complete speech

Related:
Taxation of Income Trusts, is it worth the cost and the turmoil? - Yves Fortin
A recipe for tax revenue loss - Yves Fortin
The Inconvenient Truth About Trusts - Gordon Tait
Deep Dive into Tax Issues: Canadian Pensioners Taxed Twice on Canadian Corporate Dividends - Dirk Lever
Digging Deeper - Cameron Renkas