On April 19, 2021, Deputy Prime Minister and Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland tabled in the House of Commons the Liberal Government’s first federal budget in more than two years, A Recovery Plan for Jobs, Growth, and Resilience (Budget 2021). Budget 2021 contains tax measures that provide additional COVID-19 support to Canadian businesses, promote clean energy, introduce new sales and excise tax measures, limit interest deductibility and address certain cross-border financing structures. These measures include:

 COVID-19 Support and Recovery

  • Extending existing COVID-19 emergency business supports and introducing a new Canada Recovery Hiring Program;
  • Promoting immediate expensing of the acquisition of certain depreciable capital property (up to $1.5 million per year) by Canadian-controlled private corporations;

 Clean Energy Investment

  • Amending the list of eligible Class 43.1 and 43.2 clean energy equipment;
  • Offering limited corporate income tax rate reductions for manufacturers of zero-emission technologies;
  • Creating a new input tax credit for certain capital investments in carbon capture, utilization, and storage projects;

 International Tax/General Corporate Tax

  • Introducing new rules to limit the amount of net interest expense that may be deducted in computing Canadian taxable income and to limit the deduction of amounts paid or received under hybrid mismatch arrangements;
  • Proposals to overhaul Canada’s transfer pricing rules following the Federal Court of Appeal decision in Her Majesty The Queen v Cameco Corporation(2020 FCA 112);
  • Committing to continuing the Government’s work to modernize the general anti-avoidance rule (GAAR);

 Sales/Excise Taxes

  • Committing to creating an interim digital services tax applicable to digital services businesses and to enact previously announced GST/HST measures applicable to e-commerce platforms;
  • Introducing an excise duty on vaping products and a luxury tax on personal use vehicles, boats, and planes;

 Compliance/Audit Powers

  • Restructuring Canada’s transaction disclosure rules, introducing a new class of “notifiable transactions,” and requiring disclosure of uncertain tax positions; and
  • Strengthening the CRA’s audit authority to compel persons to answer all proper questions for any purposes related to the administration or enforcement of, amongst other statutes, the Income Tax Act(Canada) and the Excise Tax Act(Canada).

Source: McCarthy

Newsletters

No Results Found

The page you requested could not be found. Try refining your search, or use the navigation above to locate the post.

Events & Sponsorship

No Results Found

The page you requested could not be found. Try refining your search, or use the navigation above to locate the post.

Articles & Publications

CRA locking 800K Canadian taxpayers out of accounts

The Canada Revenue Agency has recently locked out 800,000 users from their online accounts, out of fear that people’s usernames and passwords have been hacked. Citing the cybersecurity risk of having this information in the hands of potentially bad actors, obtained...

Financial Statements: The Horizontal Method

Analyzing Financial Statements: The Horizontal Method The second method to analyze financial statements is the horizontal method. The horizontal method is used to analyze financial information in two fiscal years. This method consists of comparing various financial...

Financial Statements: The Vertical Method

How to Analyze Financial Statements: Vertical Method As said in previous articles, we have two primary methods to analyze financial statements. Here you will learn how to use both steps by step. The first method, known as the vertical method, analyzes one fiscal...

Fundamentals of Financial Statements

Fundamentals of Financial Statements Analysis Financial Statement analysis is carried out through methods, often defined as techniques that allow knowing the entity's transactions on its financial situation and results. Based on the order to follow the analysis, these...

The U.S.’s New Law To “Ban” Shell Companies

The new U.S. Corporate Transparency Act (CTA), which passed in late 2020 as part of the National Defense Authorization Act, makes seemingly significant changes to the information required when incorporating a company in the U.S. While the legislation is a significant...