It’s ok, poor people like you and me will compensate by paying more “inflation”. /s
Removed by mod
Canada needs to implement a 99% tax on corporate money being moved offshore.
That’s an awesome way to make sure no foreign corporations ever invest in Canada ever again.
So we should allow them to come to Canada to do business, make billions of dollars, take those billions out of Canada, and not pay taxes? Look at what the foreign oil companies are doing in Alberta. They’re extracting resources in Canada, making billions, taking those billions out of Canada, and not even paying to clean up after themselves. Do we really want that kind of foreign investment? Why don’t we require them to keep that money in Canada benefiting Canadians? They’re still making profit, they’re just not avoiding their obligations to Candians.
Removed by mod
Sounds like a good way to encourage Canadian entrepreneurship.
When local business is getting routinely overwhelmed and forced out of business by foreign companies with exceedingly deep pockets (see: the Walmart effect), maybe unfettered foreign “investment” isn’t the best thing for the country and its citizens?
Removed by mod
Removed by mod
So what’s going to be done about it? Nothing as usual.
Removed by mod
Promise to consider the possibillity of further discussion and elaboration on the notion of experimenting with the hope to recognize the plausibillity of looking into a board-investigated and executed study into perhaps maybe potentially starting to pay back some (silly citizen, the rich don’t tolerate proportional fines, only flat-rate) of their ill-gotten or ill-retained monies.
Edit: the rich don’t have more or less money than you -> the amount is just different (thank you Michael Scott for this little gem)
Perfectly legal, they wrote the laws for themselves, there’s nothing you can do.
I worked at a Canadian company that did this. We were very profitable.
Got bought by a company in the EU. The EU HQ starts charging us really high consulting fees or something like that to run the business, which wiped out all the profit so it could be paid in the more favorable EU location.
However it was done was completely legal
I have no idea how corporate taxes work.
Wouldn’t taxes need to be paid on those ridiculously high consultation fees? Or would those tax rates be way lower than taxes on profit?
I suspect that since it’s the same company, it’s just a line item of how someone spent their time in the EU advising us here, but it’s not paid like hiring an outside consultant who you then have to pay gst/pst on their services. So no tax other than on the other side?
But i’m just guessing, I don’t know the whole details, maybe it is just lower tax
Removed by mod
Technically putting money in your RRSP or FHSA is tax avoidance. So is timing when you sell stocks to lower your expected taxes.
We need to be a bit more specific than that.
Removed by mod