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we can definitely disagree, but I'll call out your arguments as flimsy, some just flat-out wrong.
again, proposals for 80%+ top marginal tax rates aren't aimed at $300k-$1M earners. they target ultra-high incomes, top 0.01%. by definition, there aren't many of them, but they somehow keep getting richer
pretending they're coming for the "professional class" is fearbait, not analysis.
growth strategy isn’t about income tax rates anyway. it’s about ecosystems: capital access, talent networks, institutional support. that’s why people leave, not because they’re taxed at 40%++.
btw, the tsx has outperformed the s&p 500 so far this year.
all that to say, if you want lower taxes, you're definitely living in the wrong province 1 reply
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unrealized gains on paper shares are taxed if you exit or move your company. I guess you’ve never spoken to someone who had to pay that bill? imagine paying 25% on $10M that doesn’t exist. but yes it’s not taxed like your other capital gains, correct. not sure why you feel the need to correct me on things with which you’re unfamiliar.
and the reason I bring up trusting politicians is because this CUPE document is not policy, it’s a manifesto for their stated goals. they are lobbyists, in other words. so we have no idea how any of these ideas would be implemented by a given government, including taxing 0.01% vs. 0.1% vs. 1% earners. you don’t know and I don’t know.
the reason I am suggesting that it would not be implemented on the 0.01% ($10M+) earners is because that’s only ~400-600 people in canada. so best case scenario $3-5B in additional tax revenue or <1% of the yearly budget, if we double their current effective tax rate.
that’s great, but it only covers the interest on our national debt for one month. another way to look at it is that it’s equivalent to ~$70-120 per citizen. not transformative by any means but not nothing either.
as a result, a policy of this nature would very likely be adapted to include a larger segment of the tax base. if we’re taxing earners > $10M, why not everyone over $5M? why not $2M? they’re all rich, who cares? in the end it’s all speculation, but it’s hard to imagine a scenario in which those types of policies lead to lower taxes for anyone except for < $60k earners who are already neutral or negative contributors to the tax pool.
with regards to QC, I would love some services in exchange for what I pay. unfortunately I don’t have a family doctor, no dental, no vision, no prescription, etc. that leaves public transportation, I guess? big tax bill is a pretty expensive bus pass lol. 1 reply
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