Sunday, May 24, 2026

Fair Corporate Taxation for Canada – Ensuring Large Corporations Pay Their Fair Share


 

Canadians Pay More and More Taxes — While Corporate Profits Hit Record Highs

Executive Summary

Individual Canadians continue to shoulder a disproportionately large share of the national tax burden. In 2025, federal personal income tax revenues reached approximately $234.3 billion, while corporate income tax revenues were only $97 billion, despite corporate profits hitting record levels of $676 billion.

This proposal is not anti-capitalist or anti-profit. Profitable corporations are essential to employment, investment, pensions, innovation, and national prosperity. The issue is not whether corporations should succeed, but whether the tax system remains proportionally fair during periods of record profitability.

Large corporations, particularly Canada’s Big Five banks, benefit from complex deductions, international tax planning, and effective tax rates often well below the statutory combined rate of 26.5%.

This paper argues for comprehensive reform: a national sliding (progressive) corporate tax system based on annual profits, a strong minimum tax floor, tighter but fair deduction rules, and severe restrictions on tax haven use. These changes should apply equally to all large corporations (income above $5 million), with full small business exemptions.

Such reforms can be implemented rapidly through the Fall 2026 federal budget, without constitutional amendments, and with strong provincial alignment.

The Problem: Unequal Tax Contributions

In 2015/16, individuals paid $145 billion in income tax while corporations paid $41 billion. The imbalance persists today. Large corporations — especially in banking — report record profits while using legitimate but aggressive tools (accelerated depreciation, forward-looking loan loss provisions, and offshore subsidiaries) to reduce their tax obligations.

Canada’s Big Five banks (RBC, TD, BMO, Scotiabank, CIBC) remain among the most profitable companies in the country. They operate subsidiaries in low-tax jurisdictions such as Ireland, Barbados, Cayman Islands, and Luxembourg, enabled by tax treaties. While the Global Minimum Tax (15%) now applies, it is insufficient to fully address fairness concerns.

Individuals face progressive personal tax rates with limited deductions. Corporations, by contrast, can significantly lower their effective rates. This creates a perception — and reality — that the rules are not the same for everyone.

International Comparisions

Why This Is Not Radical: International Context

Many OECD countries have already moved toward stronger minimum taxes and anti-avoidance measures. The global 15% Global Minimum Tax (Pillar Two) is now in force across dozens of countries. Several nations, including in the European Union, United Kingdom, and Australia, have introduced windfall or excess profit taxes on unusually high corporate profits. These trends show that modernizing corporate taxation to ensure fairness is a mainstream policy direction.

Core Principles for Reform

  1. Equality Among Large Entities: Reforms must apply uniformly to all corporations above the $5 million income threshold. No special treatment for banks or any other sector.
  2. Small Business Protection: Full exemption for businesses with annual income under $5 million to protect job creators and local economies.
  3. National Consistency: Federal leadership with provincial alignment through tax collection agreements.
  4. Fairness and Responsiveness: Tax liability should rise meaningfully in highly profitable years and ease in weaker ones.
  5. Anti-Abuse Without Overreach: Deductions must reflect real economic activity, not creative accounting.

Proposed Reforms

1. National Minimum Tax on Adjusted Book Profits

Introduce a floor of 18–20% on adjusted book income (profits as reported to shareholders, with limited adjustments). This prevents highly profitable corporations from reducing tax near zero through deductions.

2. Tighter but Flexible Deduction Rules

  • Depreciation: Shift to realistic economic useful-life schedules instead of accelerated rates.
  • Loan Losses/Provisions: Allow only actual realized losses from the prior year. Forward-looking expected credit losses (common under IFRS 9) would be restricted for tax purposes in high-profit years.
  • International Operations: Require genuine economic substance. Pure tax-haven subsidiaries with minimal staff and disproportionate profits would face denial of treaty benefits.

3. Sliding (Progressive) Corporate Tax Rate Structure

The centrepiece of the proposal: a profit-responsive sliding scale.

Annual Taxable ProfitMarginal Tax RateNotes
$0 – $50 million20%Support for growing companies
$50M – $200 million26%Near current standard rate
$200M – $1 billion30%Higher contribution zone
$1 billion – $5 billion33%Strong surtax on very large profits
Over $5 billion36%Top rate for record years

Combined with the existing federal 15% base + provincial rates + 1.5% bank surtax where applicable, adjusted for the new brackets.

Examples:

  • A corporation with $120 million profit: Effective rate ~23.5%.
  • A major bank with $4 billion profit (strong year): Effective rate ~31%.
  • Same bank with $800 million profit (weaker year): Effective rate ~28.75%.

This structure directly rewards prudence in lower-profit years while requiring greater contributions during boom times.

4. Strengthened Anti-Tax Haven Measures

Build on the existing Global Minimum Tax by:

  • Raising the effective floor for Canadian large corporations.
  • Mandating full public country-by-country tax reporting.
  • Denying benefits for entities lacking real economic activity.

Implementation Roadmap – As Soon As Possible

This package can move quickly:

  • Announcement: Fall 2026 Federal Budget.
  • Legislation: Included in the Budget Implementation Bill.
  • Effective Date: Taxation years beginning January 1, 2028 (with some elements, like minimum tax expansion, phased in for 2027).
  • Provincial Alignment: Encouraged via federal-provincial tax agreements. No constitutional change required.
  • Phasing: Start with minimum tax and anti-haven rules in Year 1, followed by full sliding rates in Year 2.

The Department of Finance already has modelling capacity from the Global Minimum Tax rollout. Public consultations could occur immediately after budget announcement.

Expected Benefits

  • Increased Revenue: Significant new funds in high-profit years for housing, healthcare, transit, and debt reduction.
  • Greater Fairness: Large corporations contribute more proportionally, closer to the burden carried by individuals.
  • Economic Stability: Lower rates in weak years reduce pressure during downturns.
  • Reduced Distortions: Uniform rules across sectors prevent gaming the system.
  • Transparency: Public reporting builds public trust.

Addressing Key Concerns

Pension Exposure

Canadian pension funds, including the CPP Investment Board and major private plans, hold significant stakes in Canadian banks and large corporations. These balanced reforms target excessive tax optimization rather than profits themselves, aiming to preserve long-term profitability and market stability for retirees.

National Debt and Fiscal Sustainability

Revenue from these reforms would contribute to responsible debt reduction, healthcare funding, infrastructure development, and addressing housing pressures. This is about restoring long-term national fiscal balance, not simply expanding government spending.

Addressing Counterarguments

Critics will claim higher taxes hurt competitiveness, increase consumer costs, or reduce lending. These risks are real but manageable:

  • The proposed rates remain competitive with many OECD peers.
  • Costs can be partially passed on, but excessive profits suggest room exists.
  • Targeted design (profit-based, minimum floor) is superior to blunt rate hikes.
  • Evidence from other countries shows well-designed minimum taxes raise revenue with limited economic harm.

Strong, transparent rules with economic substance tests protect legitimate business while closing loopholes.

Conclusion

A healthy economy requires more than profit alone. It requires public trust, fair rules, and a shared belief that success and responsibility must exist together. Canada does not need to punish achievement, innovation, or investment. But neither can it allow ordinary citizens to carry a growing share of the national burden while some of the country’s largest institutions benefit from increasingly complex advantages unavailable to the average taxpayer.

The long-term strength of any democracy depends not only on economic growth, but on whether its citizens believe the system remains fair, transparent, and accountable to all. A nation where responsibility is shared proportionally is far more stable than one where imbalance becomes normalized.

Reforming corporate taxation will not solve every challenge Canada faces, but restoring fairness is an essential place to begin.

Canada can maintain a competitive, pro-growth economy while demanding fairness from its largest and most profitable corporations. Individuals are not “above the law,” and neither should massive banks and corporations be when they earn record profits.

The time for meaningful reform is now. We urge the federal government to include this package in the Fall 2026 budget. A fairer tax system strengthens public services, reduces inequality, and reinforces confidence in our institutions.

Call to Action: Share this paper with your Member of Parliament, discuss it in your community, and demand accountability on corporate taxation. A more equitable Canada is possible.

Saturday, May 9, 2026

Why Young Generations Must Relearn the Real History of Centralized Power.









History has already tested socialism and communism and tens of millions paid the price for the results.

Why Young Generations Must Relearn the Real History of Centralized Power.

Every generation inherits ideas. But not every generation inherits the consequences of those ideas.

Across universities, social media platforms, activist movements, and parts of the modern political culture, socialism and even communism are once again being presented to younger generations as compassionate, fair, and morally superior alternatives to capitalism. The promises sound familiar: equality, justice, economic security, free services, and protection from corporate power.

What is too often missing, however, is the full historical record.

Millions of young people today were born long after the fall of the Berlin Wall, the collapse of the Soviet Union, Maoist China’s famines, or the brutal repression of Eastern Europe. Many never witnessed the economic stagnation, censorship, fear, shortages, state surveillance, political imprisonment, or mass killings that repeatedly emerged under centralized socialist and communist systems.

History matters because ideas have consequences.

And the historical verdict on centralized socialist and communist systems is not ambiguous.

The Promise Versus the Reality

Socialism and communism were often introduced with promises of equality, fairness, worker empowerment, and economic justice. In theory, many supporters envisioned societies free from exploitation, poverty, and class division.

But the practical question was never the aspiration alone. The real question was always:

How would these systems actually function in the real world?

Historically, the answer was through centralized state control over:

  • production
  • agriculture
  • pricing
  • industry
  • labor
  • information
  • speech
  • political opposition

And repeatedly, concentrated economic power became concentrated political power.

As your attached material correctly notes, socialism’s practical mechanism relied upon centralized economic decision-making rather than decentralized individual choice.

That distinction proved critical.

Because when governments attempt to control entire economies from the top down, they inevitably face a problem no centralized authority can fully solve:

Human societies are too complex to be managed like machines.

The Repeated Pattern of Failure

Throughout the twentieth and twenty-first centuries, socialist and communist systems were attempted across multiple continents, cultures, languages, and societies.

The outcomes varied in degree, but the pattern repeated with startling consistency.

The Soviet Union

The USSR attempted one of history’s largest centrally planned economies. While it industrialized rapidly, it also produced:

  • chronic shortages
  • low productivity
  • political repression
  • forced collectivization
  • prison labor camps
  • censorship
  • state terror

Ultimately, the Soviet system collapsed under the weight of economic inefficiency and authoritarian rigidity.

Maoist China

Under Mao Zedong, China pursued radical communist restructuring through policies such as the Great Leap Forward and Cultural Revolution.

The result was catastrophe.

The Great Leap Forward alone contributed to one of the deadliest famines in human history, with death estimates ranging into the tens of millions.

Modern China itself eventually moved away from strict centralized socialism and adopted major market-oriented reforms in order to achieve economic growth.

Ironically, China’s greatest economic expansion began only after loosening rigid communist economic controls.

Cambodia Under Pol Pot

The Khmer Rouge attempted perhaps the most radical socialist experiment ever attempted, abolishing money, markets, private property, religion, and intellectual life itself.

The result was genocide.

An estimated two million people died through execution, starvation, forced labor, and mass repression in a country of only several million people.

Venezuela

Once among Latin America’s wealthiest countries, Venezuela became a modern warning about excessive state control, nationalization, and economic mismanagement.

Hyperinflation, collapsing industries, shortages of food and medicine, and mass migration followed. Their inflation rates reached extraordinary levels while basic economic functioning deteriorated.

East Versus West Germany

After World War II, East and West Germany began from roughly comparable conditions.

One side embraced centralized socialism. The other embraced market economics.

By 1989, West Germans enjoyed dramatically higher living standards, greater freedom, and greater prosperity than East Germans.

The Berlin Wall itself became one of history’s most symbolic admissions of systemic failure: People were not risking their lives trying to flee capitalism into socialism. They were fleeing socialism into freedom.

North Korea Versus South Korea

The Korean peninsula presents another striking comparison.

One system evolved into a dynamic market economy and modern democracy. The other became one of the world’s most isolated authoritarian states.

The contrast in prosperity, personal freedom, technology, food security, and quality of life speaks for itself.

Why These Systems Repeatedly Become Authoritarian

This is perhaps the most important lesson younger generations are not being fully taught.

Centralized economic systems almost inevitably require centralized political enforcement.

Why?

Because when governments control:

  • jobs
  • housing
  • food distribution
  • wages
  • media
  • industry
  • banking
  • agriculture

they also gain immense control over individual citizens.

And when shortages, inefficiency, or public dissatisfaction emerge — as they repeatedly did — governments often respond by:

  • restricting dissent
  • controlling information
  • silencing opposition
  • increasing surveillance
  • criminalizing criticism
  • expanding state power

The problem is not merely “bad leaders.”

The deeper problem is that concentrated economic power naturally produces concentrated political power.

History repeatedly demonstrated that systems promising equality often evolved into systems where:

  • party elites lived differently than ordinary citizens,
  • political loyalty became economically necessary,
  • and freedom became conditional upon obedience.

The Incentive Problem

One of the most consistent criticisms raised by economists throughout the twentieth century involved incentives.

Your attached material highlights this clearly.

In market systems:

  • innovation is rewarded,
  • efficiency matters,
  • competition pressures improvement,
  • and individuals retain incentives to create, save, build, and invest.

In heavily centralized systems, however:

  • prices are distorted,
  • competition weakens,
  • productivity declines,
  • shortages emerge,
  • and bureaucracies replace market signals.

This does not mean capitalism is perfect. It is not.

Market economies can produce inequality, corporate abuse, monopolies, corruption, and social dislocation. These are legitimate concerns that must be addressed seriously.

But history also shows that market-based economies — despite their flaws — have consistently produced:

  • higher living standards,
  • greater innovation,
  • longer life expectancy,
  • broader consumer access,
  • stronger food production,
  • and greater individual freedom

than fully centralized socialist systems.

Why Young People Are Again Drawn Toward Socialism

To understand the modern resurgence of socialist ideas, one must also acknowledge present frustrations honestly.

Many younger citizens today face:

  • unaffordable housing,
  • rising debt,
  • stagnant wages,
  • economic insecurity,
  • distrust of political institutions,
  • and growing concentration of corporate power.

When people feel excluded from prosperity, radical alternatives naturally become more attractive.

That frustration is real.

But history warns us that replacing flawed market systems with centralized state control has repeatedly produced outcomes far worse than the problems those systems claimed to solve.

The answer to flawed capitalism is not authoritarian collectivism.

The answer is better governance, accountability, competition, opportunity, transparency, ethical institutions, and responsible democratic reform.

The Scandinavian Myth: Nordic Countries Are Not Socialist Economies

One of the most common arguments made by modern supporters of socialism is the claim that Scandinavian countries prove “socialism works.”

Countries such as Denmark, Norway, Sweden, Finland, and Iceland are frequently presented as successful examples of socialist systems because they combine high living standards, universal healthcare, strong social safety nets, and relatively low levels of income inequality.

But this comparison is misleading.

The Nordic countries are not socialist economies in the traditional sense of centralized state ownership or command-and-control economic planning.

They are overwhelmingly market-based capitalist economies combined with expansive welfare states.

This distinction matters enormously.

Private Ownership and Free Markets

Unlike classical socialist systems:

  • businesses in Nordic countries remain primarily privately owned,
  • markets largely determine prices,
  • entrepreneurship is encouraged,
  • and international trade plays a major role in their economies.

The Scandinavian countries consistently rank among the world’s strongest economies for:

  • economic freedom,
  • ease of doing business,
  • innovation,
  • property rights,
  • and global competitiveness.

They do not operate centrally planned economies like the former Soviet Union, Maoist China, or Venezuela.

Welfare State Does Not Equal Socialism

The Nordic model is better described as:

capitalism with extensive social welfare programs.

Wealth is primarily created through:

  • private enterprise,
  • competitive markets,
  • innovation,
  • exports,
  • investment,
  • and productivity.

Governments then redistribute part of that wealth through:

  • universal healthcare,
  • education,
  • childcare,
  • pensions,
  • and social support systems.

That is fundamentally different from socialism’s traditional model of state ownership of the means of production.

Nordic Leaders Have Rejected the “Socialist” Label

Even Scandinavian leaders themselves have publicly rejected being described as socialist economies.

Former Danish Prime Minister Lars Løkke Rasmussen stated clearly:

“Denmark is far from a socialist planned economy. Denmark is a market economy.”

That distinction is critical because many foreign political activists selectively use Scandinavian success while ignoring the strong capitalist foundations that actually generate Nordic prosperity.

The Nordic Reforms

It is also often forgotten that Sweden and other Nordic countries experienced serious economic difficulties during the 1970s and 1980s, including:

  • slowing growth,
  • rising government burdens,
  • declining competitiveness,
  • and tax pressures.

In response, many Nordic countries introduced major market-oriented reforms:

  • privatization,
  • pension reforms,
  • deregulation,
  • freer trade,
  • and increased competition.

Modern Scandinavia therefore evolved not toward more centralized socialism, but toward a balance of:

  • free-market wealth creation,
  • combined with strong social safety systems.

The Real Lesson of Scandinavia

The Scandinavian model does not demonstrate that socialism works.

Rather, it demonstrates that:

  • highly productive capitalist economies
  • can choose to fund broader social programs
  • if they maintain strong institutions,
  • high social trust,
  • economic competitiveness,
  • and disciplined governance.

In essence: Scandinavia uses capitalism to create wealth and welfare systems to redistribute part of that wealth more broadly.

That is very different from the centralized socialist systems that historically produced economic stagnation, shortages, repression, and authoritarian rule.

The Forgotten Human Cost

The twentieth century witnessed some of history’s largest state-directed tragedies under communist and authoritarian socialist regimes.

Scholars continue debating exact numbers, definitions, and classifications. But there is broad historical consensus that tens of millions died through combinations of:

  • famine,
  • forced collectivization,
  • executions,
  • labor camps,
  • political purges,
  • deportations,
  • and repression.

Those victims deserve historical honesty — not ideological sanitization.

No political ideology should ever become so sacred that its failures cannot be discussed openly.

The Real Lesson

The central lesson of the twentieth century is not that societies should ignore inequality, hardship, or injustice.

The real lesson is this:

Whenever economic and political power become too concentrated — whether under governments, corporations, parties, or ideologies — freedom becomes fragile.

Systems that promise utopia often become dangerous precisely because they justify expanding centralized power “for the greater good.”

And once freedom, private property, independent institutions, free speech, and political dissent are weakened, restoring them becomes extraordinarily difficult.

A Warning Future Generations Should Never Forget

Young people deserve the full historical record — not selective history.

They deserve to study:

  • both the failures of capitalism and the failures of socialism,
  • both corporate abuses and state abuses,
  • both inequality and authoritarianism,
  • both economic hardship and political repression.

Because democracy survives only when citizens are educated enough to question all concentrations of power — public or private.

The tragedy of socialism and communism was not merely economic failure.

It was that systems promising equality and liberation repeatedly concentrated power into the hands of political elites, weakened individual freedoms, suppressed dissent, and produced human suffering on an enormous scale.

History does not demand blind ideology. It demands memory.

And societies that forget history eventually risk repeating it.

Closing

No society will ever be perfect. Human beings are imperfect, institutions are imperfect, and every economic and political system carries risks, strengths, and weaknesses.

But history repeatedly teaches one enduring lesson:

Whenever power becomes too centralized — whether political, economic, ideological, corporate, or governmental — individual freedom, accountability, and human dignity eventually come under threat.

The great challenge of every generation is not to pursue utopian promises or ideological absolutes, but to build societies grounded in freedom, guided by reason, and restrained by responsibility.

Freedom without responsibility eventually collapses into disorder. Responsibility without freedom becomes coercion. And reason without the courage to question power becomes conformity.

Democracies survive not because governments, markets, or institutions are flawless, but because free citizens retain the ability to think independently, debate openly, challenge authority peacefully, and correct mistakes before power becomes absolute.

History must never be censored, romanticized, or selectively rewritten to fit modern ideological narratives.

It must be studied honestly — including both the failures of unrestrained capitalism and the catastrophic human consequences that repeatedly emerged under centralized socialist and communist systems.

The preservation of a free society ultimately depends not on slogans, parties, or ideologies, but on citizens willing to defend truth, question power, uphold accountability, and accept the responsibilities that freedom itself requires.

Because in the end, civilizations endure only when freedom, reason, and responsibility remain in balance.