Repairing Canada's Mining-Tax System to be Less Distorting and Complex

The province of Ontario ended its most recent fiscal year with a $12 billion deficit and the Fraser Institute has calculated that the province is in worse financial shape than even the fiscally appalling state of California. One would think that a province so financially debilitated would want to av...

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Main Authors: Duanjie Chen, Jack Mintz
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
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Online Access:http://www.policyschool.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/03/mining-tax-chen-mintz.pdf
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spelling ftrepec:oai:RePEc:clh:resear:v:6:y:2013:i:18 2024-04-14T08:15:11+00:00 Repairing Canada's Mining-Tax System to be Less Distorting and Complex Duanjie Chen Jack Mintz http://www.policyschool.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/03/mining-tax-chen-mintz.pdf unknown http://www.policyschool.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/03/mining-tax-chen-mintz.pdf article ftrepec 2024-03-19T10:39:56Z The province of Ontario ended its most recent fiscal year with a $12 billion deficit and the Fraser Institute has calculated that the province is in worse financial shape than even the fiscally appalling state of California. One would think that a province so financially debilitated would want to avoid giving unnecessary and wasteful tax breaks to resource companies. Yet, a review of the mining-tax regimes across the country finds that Ontario’s system — specifically its provincial resource allowance, which duplicates the allowances provided by Ottawa that shield miners from risk — is redundant, expensive and wasteful. Ontario is not the only province requiring a modernization of its mining-tax regime. In every province except Nova Scotia and New Brunswick, mining firms enjoy a lower marginal rate for taxes and royalties than for non-resource companies. The inevitable result has been a distortion of investment toward mining projects that might otherwise be economically inefficient. That means that in major oil-producing provinces, such as Alberta, Saskatchewan and Newfoundland, mining investment benefits from larger tax incentives than oil and gas investment. The reasons for favouring the mining of metal over oil are at least unclear and certainly economically unjustifiable. The federal government has already begun making several changes to its tax policies to scale back preferential and irrational inducements for mining investment, including, most recently, reducing accelerated depreciation allowances for certain mining assets and phasing out the corporate Mineral Exploration Tax Credit and the Atlantic Investment Tax Credit for resources. But Ottawa’s efforts to modernize Canada’s mining-tax structure can only go so far, when provinces continue to rely on what are often overly complex tax systems that have a distortionary effect on economic decisions being made by investors. The next step in modernizing Canada’s mining-tax system requires provinces to start eliminating preferential and wasteful tax breaks for ... Article in Journal/Newspaper Newfoundland RePEc (Research Papers in Economics)
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description The province of Ontario ended its most recent fiscal year with a $12 billion deficit and the Fraser Institute has calculated that the province is in worse financial shape than even the fiscally appalling state of California. One would think that a province so financially debilitated would want to avoid giving unnecessary and wasteful tax breaks to resource companies. Yet, a review of the mining-tax regimes across the country finds that Ontario’s system — specifically its provincial resource allowance, which duplicates the allowances provided by Ottawa that shield miners from risk — is redundant, expensive and wasteful. Ontario is not the only province requiring a modernization of its mining-tax regime. In every province except Nova Scotia and New Brunswick, mining firms enjoy a lower marginal rate for taxes and royalties than for non-resource companies. The inevitable result has been a distortion of investment toward mining projects that might otherwise be economically inefficient. That means that in major oil-producing provinces, such as Alberta, Saskatchewan and Newfoundland, mining investment benefits from larger tax incentives than oil and gas investment. The reasons for favouring the mining of metal over oil are at least unclear and certainly economically unjustifiable. The federal government has already begun making several changes to its tax policies to scale back preferential and irrational inducements for mining investment, including, most recently, reducing accelerated depreciation allowances for certain mining assets and phasing out the corporate Mineral Exploration Tax Credit and the Atlantic Investment Tax Credit for resources. But Ottawa’s efforts to modernize Canada’s mining-tax structure can only go so far, when provinces continue to rely on what are often overly complex tax systems that have a distortionary effect on economic decisions being made by investors. The next step in modernizing Canada’s mining-tax system requires provinces to start eliminating preferential and wasteful tax breaks for ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Duanjie Chen
Jack Mintz
spellingShingle Duanjie Chen
Jack Mintz
Repairing Canada's Mining-Tax System to be Less Distorting and Complex
author_facet Duanjie Chen
Jack Mintz
author_sort Duanjie Chen
title Repairing Canada's Mining-Tax System to be Less Distorting and Complex
title_short Repairing Canada's Mining-Tax System to be Less Distorting and Complex
title_full Repairing Canada's Mining-Tax System to be Less Distorting and Complex
title_fullStr Repairing Canada's Mining-Tax System to be Less Distorting and Complex
title_full_unstemmed Repairing Canada's Mining-Tax System to be Less Distorting and Complex
title_sort repairing canada's mining-tax system to be less distorting and complex
url http://www.policyschool.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/03/mining-tax-chen-mintz.pdf
genre Newfoundland
genre_facet Newfoundland
op_relation http://www.policyschool.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/03/mining-tax-chen-mintz.pdf
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