Former Liberal Finance Minister Monreau Criticizes New Budget as Being a Threat to Investment

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A former federal finance minister is slamming parts of the federal budget, which was presented on April 16.

Bill Morneau was Liberal finance minister from 2015 to 2020. He said there was talk of increasing the tax on capital gains while he was on the job, but he pushed back because he feared it would discourage investment.

“This was very clearly something that while I was there, we resisted,” Mr. Morneau said on a post-budget webcast hosted by accounting firm KPMG on April 17. “And we resisted for very specific reasons. Concerned about the growth of the country.”

Mr. Morneau said what will likely happen now is that investors and companies will think twice before investing in Canada.

“This is clearly a negative to our long-term goal, which is growth in the economy, productive growth, and investments,” he said. “So that’s a challenge that we’re going to face as a result of this budget.”

“Inclusion rates are something that investors worry about a lot,” he added. “They want to know that the returns from their investment will be reasonable.”

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Right now, individuals pay tax on 50 percent of their capital gains. The change means paying tax on 50 percent of the first $250,000, and on 66.7 percent for any amount above that.

Businesses go from being taxed on 50 percent of their capital gains to being taxed on 66.7 percent.

The capital gains tax increase was touted by Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland as a way to make the tax system more fair, especially for younger Canadians who are falling behind the economic status of their parents.

But while the federal government says the increase is aimed only at the very wealthy, many financial experts say it will do more.

For example, the law firm Borden Ladner Gervais LLP said on its website, “Individuals who own a single investment property or secondary residence, (such as a cottage) while not necessarily the wealthiest Canadians, will now be exposed to significant additional taxes on the disposition of their property.”

“We’ve created a disincentive, and that’s very difficult. I don’t think there’s any way to put a sugar coating on top of it,” said Mr. Morneau. “It’s a challenge.”

He pointed to the fact that Canada’s GDP per capita is declining, and productivity is lagging behind many other countries, including the United States—which leaves Canadians less wealthy.

“We need to think about the future and we need to think about the fact that Canada is not growing at the pace that we need it to grow. And if you can’t grow the size of the pie, it’s not very easy to figure out how to share the proceeds,” said Mr. Morneau.

“The real challenge we have is not enough investment in our economy. And that’s why the capital gains inclusion rate change is for me, opposite in terms of the direction we should be going. It’s actually reducing the incentive to invest,” he said.

Not everyone is critical of the increase in the capital gains tax. For example, the Canadian Labour Congress (CLC) praised it.

“We appreciate moves to increase taxes on the wealthiest Canadians and profitable corporations,” the CLC said in a news release on the federal budget. However, the CLC said more was needed to help workers facing a cost of living squeeze.

Part of that squeeze is being caused by inflation, and Mr. Morneau was also critical of federal deficit spending, which is pegged at $39.8 billion in the 2024–2025 budget.

“This government does show some reductions, but I would argue they haven’t gone far enough. It needs to go further,” he said. “Back in 2019, the last time I did a budget, we were projecting in that year $19.8 billion deficit. Now we’re projecting more than twice that, so we’ve really gone in the opposite direction.”

He said both the federal government and provincial governments need to look at ways to reduce spending.

“The government needs to think about not only its spending, but also the provincial government spends, we’ve seen significant increases in provincial government spending,” he said. “And that is obviously working against the central bank’s goals of reducing inflation.”

But for him, the biggest issue is the need for Canada’s economy to grow faster than it is.

“But I think the big picture takeaway is that we haven’t focused enough on growth. And for me, that’s the fundamental concern,” he said.

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