By Mark Gollom
If the United States, the largest economy in the world, has one of the highest corporate tax rates in the world, why should Canada worry about its rate?
As a recent survey by KPMG points out, Canada's average general corporate tax rate (that is, the average sum of provincial and federal rates) of 33.5 per cent compares favourably with the U.S. rate of 40 per cent.
In fact, the NDP thinks our rates are too low and promises to scrap the billions of dollars in corporate tax cuts the Liberals and Conservatives are proposing.
The party immediately zeroed in on the issue following the release of the Liberals' election platform, blasting Stéphane Dion for, as NDP finance critic Peggy Nash said, wanting to "keep in place every penny of Stephen Harper's corporate tax giveaway and even cut deeper."
This is true. The current federal corporate tax rate stands at 19.5 per cent, down from 22.1 per cent when Stephen Harper took office. The Liberals' plan is to "accelerate and deepen the currently planned corporate tax cuts" in order to reduce the rate to 14 per cent by 2012.
That's an even deeper cut than that proposed by the Tories, who are looking to decrease the rate to 15 per cent by the same year.
According to the economic statement of 2007, such corporate tax cuts would reduce government revenues by $14.1 billion by the 2012/2013 fiscal year.
The NDP sees it differently. It argues that had Harper maintained the federal corporate tax rate at 22.12 per cent and were it to stay at that level, the government's coffers would be $50 billion richer by 2012.
Canada's rate is 3rd-highest among OECD countries
But the federal corporate tax rate is only half the picture. Corporations must also pay provincial corporate tax rates, which, when combined with the federal rate, pushes Canada's general corporate tax rate to an average of 33.5 per cent, according to KPMG.
While this rate, as KPMG says, is lower than that of the U.S, it still means Canada has the third-highest corporate tax rate among OECD countries and is well above the average of 25.9 per cent.
"It looks like most of the OECD are trying to get down to that magical 25 per cent rate, and that's why from a policy perspective, Canada is trying to as well," said KPMG tax analyst Greg Wiebe.