|
RECOMMENDATION |
|
|
Her Excellency the Governor General recommends to the House of
Commons the appropriation of public revenue under the circumstances,
in the manner and for the purposes set out in a measure entitled ``An Act
to amend the Income Tax Act, the Income Tax Application Rules, certain
Acts related to the Income Tax Act, the Canada Pension Plan, the
Customs Act, the Excise Tax Act, the Modernization of Benefits and
Obligations Act and another Act related to the Excise Tax Act''.
|
|
|
SUMMARY |
|
|
These amendments implement income tax measures announced in
the February 2000 budget and the October 2000 Economic Statement
and Budget Update, as well as a variety of amendments to the Income
Tax Act and related statutes most of which were originally included in
Bill C-43 (first reading in September 2000) or otherwise previously
announced. The measures of greater significance are summarized
below.
|
|
|
(1) Government's Five-Year Tax Reduction Plan: provides $100
billion in tax relief by 2004-2005, reducing the federal income tax paid
by individuals resident in Canada by 21% on average. Families with
children will receive an even larger tax cut - about 27% on average.
Measures included will
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(2) Child Care Expense Deduction: increases the maximum annual
amount deductible for child care expenses for each eligible child in
respect of whom the disability tax credit may be claimed to $10,000
from $7,000.
|
|
|
(3) Disability Tax Credit: extends the disability tax credit to
individuals who, but for extensive therapy, would be markedly
restricted in their activities of daily living; provides a supplement for
disabled children under the age of 18 years; extends the transferability
of the credit to most relatives of a disabled person; and, starting in 2001,
increases the amounts on which the credit and the new supplement are
calculated to $6,000 and $3,500 from $4,293 and $2,941, respectively.
|
|
|
(4) Caregiver and Infirm Dependant Tax Credits: increases the
amount on which each of these credits is calculated to $3,500 from
$2,446.
|
|
|
(5) Medical Expense Tax Credit: includes reasonable incremental
costs relating to the construction of the principal place of residence of
an individual who lacks normal physical development or has a severe
and prolonged ability impairment to enable the individual to gain access
to, or to be mobile within, the residence.
|
|
|
(6) Donations of Ecological Gifts: halves the normal capital gains
inclusion for an ecological gift the value of which has been certified by
the Minister of the Environment; and clarifies rules for calculating any
capital gain or loss realized as a result of such a gift.
|
|
|
(7) Scholarships, Fellowships and Bursaries: increases by $2,500
the exemption for scholarships, fellowships and bursaries received by
a taxpayer in connection with the taxpayer's enrolment in a program in
respect of which the taxpayer may claim the education tax credit.
|
|
|
(8) Education Tax Credit: doubles the monthly amounts on which
the credit allowed to full-time and part-time students is based to $400
and $120, respectively.
|
|
|
(9) Clergy Residence Deduction: provides clearer rules for
determining the amount deductible in respect of a clergy's residence.
|
|
|
(10) CPP/QPP Contributions on Self-Employed Earnings:
introduces a deduction from business income for one-half of CPP/QPP
contributions on self-employed earnings, with the other half of the
contributions remaining eligible for the CPP/QPP tax credit.
|
|
|
(11) Thin Capitalization: amends the provisions to have the
debt-to-equity ratio calculated on an averaged basis, reduces the
acceptable debt-to-equity ratio to 2:1 from 3:1 and repeals the
exemption for manufacturers of aircraft and aircraft components.
|
|
|
(12) Non-Resident-Owned Investment Corporations: phases out,
over a three-year period, the special income tax regime for this type of
corporation.
|
|
|
(13) Weak Currency Debt: limits the deductibility of interest
expenses and adjusts foreign exchange gains and losses in respect of
weak currency debts and associated hedging transactions.
|
|
|
(14) Government Assistance - SR & ED: categorizes as govern
ment assistance provincial deductions for SR&ED that exceed the
amount of the SR&ED expenditures.
|
|
|
(15) Foreign Tax Credits - Oil and Gas Production Sharing
Agreements: clarifies the eligibility for a business foreign tax credit of
certain payments made by Canadian resident taxpayers to foreign
governments on account of levies imposed in connection with
production sharing agreements.
|
|
|
(16) Foreign Exploration and Development Expenses (FEDE):
amends the rules to require that the FEDE of a claimant must relate to
either foreign resource property acquired by the claimant or be made for
the purpose of enhancing the value of foreign resource property owned,
or to be owned, by the claimant; ensures appropriate treatment of FEDE
in computing foreign tax credits, and imposes a 30% restriction for the
annual deduction of new FEDE balances.
|
|
|
(17) Flow-Through Share Investment Tax Credit: introduces a
temporary 15% investment tax credit for certain ``grass roots'' mineral
exploration.
|
|
|
(18) Foreign Branch Banking: provides amendments to the Income
Tax Act to accommodate branches of foreign banks operating in
Canada.
|
|
|
(19) Capital Dividend Account: permits amounts distributed to a
corporation from a trust in respect of capital gains or capital dividends
realized or received by the trust to be included in the corporation's
capital dividend account.
|
|
|
(20) Taxpayer Migration: enhances Canada's ability to tax the
gains accrued by emigrants while they were resident in Canada.
|
|
|
(21) Trusts: addresses the tax treatment of property distributed from
a Canadian trust to a non-resident beneficiary and introduces new
measures dealing with the tax treatment of bare, protective and similar
trusts as well as mutual fund trusts, health and welfare trusts and trusts
governed by registered retirement savings plans and registered retire
ment income funds.
|
|
|
(22) Advertising Expenses: implements the income tax aspects of
the June 1999 agreement between Canada and the United States
concerning periodicals.
|
|
|
(23) Simultaneous Control: confirms that, in a chain of corpora
tions, a corporation is controlled by its immediate parent even where the
parent is itself controlled by a third corporation.
|
|
|
(24) Foreign Affiliates Held by Partnerships: ensures that Cana
dian corporations that are members of a partnership that holds shares of
non-resident corporations are provided relief from double taxation on
the income derived from those shares and receive the same tax
treatment in respect of the disposition of those shares as if they held the
shares directly.
|
|
|
(25) Foreign Affiliate Losses: provides that foreign accrual
property losses of a foreign affiliate may be carried back three years and
forward seven years for the purpose of determining the affiliate's
foreign accrual property income for a particular taxation year.
|
|
|
(26) Capital Tax: extends to the end of 2000 the additional capital
tax on life insurance corporations.
|
|
|
(27) Stop-Loss Rule: extends the rule that suspends recognition of
a loss when a corporation, trust or partnership transfers depreciable
property to transferors who are affiliated persons (including individu
als).
|
|
|
(28) Types of Property: amends the corporate divisive reorganiza
tion rules to no longer require that each transferee corporation receive
its pro-rata share of each type of property in the case of certain public
corporate divisive reorganizations.
|
|
|
(29) Replacement Property Rules: provides that the replacement
property rules do not apply to shares of the capital stock of corporations.
|
|
|
(30) Limited Liability Partnerships: ensures that a member of a
``limited liability partnership'' (under provincial law) is not automati
cally a ``limited partner'' for the purposes of the Income Tax Act.
|
|
|
(31) Non-Resident Film and Video Actors: applies a new 23%
withholding tax on payments to non-resident film and video actors and
their corporations, with an option to have the actor and corporation pay
regular Part I tax on the net earnings instead.
|
|