{"id":3615,"date":"1946-04-01T01:00:00","date_gmt":"1946-04-01T01:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/april-1946-vol-27-no-4-income-tax\/"},"modified":"2022-11-28T15:04:30","modified_gmt":"2022-11-28T15:04:30","slug":"april-1946-vol-27-no-4-income-tax","status":"publish","type":"rbc_letter","link":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/april-1946-vol-27-no-4-income-tax\/","title":{"rendered":"April 1946 &#8211; Vol. 27, No. 4 &#8211; Income Tax"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"layout-column-main\">\n<p class=\"boldtext\"> Spring is not only a time of young men&#8217;s                     fancies, of budding trees, and burgeoning flowers: it is also                     the open season for income tax returns and payments.<\/p>\n<p>It has been said, particularly in war years, that Canadians                     do not dislike the payment so much as the act of paying and                     the chore of filling blank spaces in forms. Hostility to tax                     reports seems to be a natural reaction. The grumbling taxpayer                     resents the intrusion of the government in his private affairs.                     And, of course, he does not like the changes in his desired                     standard of living made necessary by payment of taxes.<\/p>\n<p>Canada&#8217;s Income War Tax Act has grown from a few paragraphs                     to 84 pages, containing 48,000 words, and there are pamphlets                     and booklets galore explaining what the Act means. One &#8220;guide&#8221;                     to income tax has 131,000 words, while another, designed for                     more popular use, has 80,000 words. The mass of explanatory                     material available on income taxes recalls the announcement                     of the Scottish inventor of a system of logarithms. In 1614,                     John Napier wrote: &#8220;Seeing there is nothing (right well beloved                     Students of Mathematics) that is so troublesome to mathematical                     practice, nor doth more molest and hinder calculators, than                     the multiplications, divisions, square and cubical extractions                     of great numbers, which besides the tedious expense of time                     are for the most part subject to many slippery errors, I began                     therefore to consider in my mind by what certain and ready                     art I might remove those hindrances.&#8221; Men and women today                     would be very thankful if Mr. Napier had turned his attention                     to the simplifying of income tax forms, and the removal of                     multiple chances for &#8220;slippery errors.&#8221; At the same time,                     income tax prose should be abolished and there should be an                     Act compelling the authors of tax instruction sheets to use                     short words, short sentences and no brackets.<\/p>\n<p>It is generally conceded that the income tax is a reasonable                     kind of taxation. It can be delicately adjusted to individual                     circumstances, and thus made fairer in its incidence than                     other taxes. It adapts itself automatically, particularly                     since Canada went on the &#8220;pay-as-you-go&#8221; basis,                     to economic fluctuations.<\/p>\n<p>Before the war, there were about 300,000 persons making                     income tax returns in the Dominion; today, there are 2\u00bd million.                     In addition to the increase in numbers of persons preparing                     returns, there has been a yearly complication of the statements                     needed, so that both taxpayers and officials have been laden                     with work. It has been suggested that the government might                     eliminate all reports on incomes of less than $3,000 a year,                     leaving the employer to deduct the tax and make consolidated                     returns, while the taxation department concentrated upon the                     taxpaying class which contributes the bulk of revenue with                     the objective of making assessments more speedily. Against                     this it is argued that when every person within the taxable                     class must present a declaration of his income, and calculate                     his own tax, he becomes better aware of the responsibility                     he bears in the national economy. Probably Aesop, in his fable                     about taxation of the animal kingdom, hit the nail on the                     head. When the tiger proposed that taxation should be judged                     by vices, each beast settling the quantity for its neighbour,                     the elephant countered with a suggestion that taxation should                     be levied on virtues, and &#8220;leave it to everyone to give a                     catalogue of his own, and then there is very little doubt                     but it would prove the means of raising a most ample and rich                     exchequer.&#8221; When a campaign for publicity of income tax returns                     was going through one of its periodical resurgences in the                     United States, an argument was brought forth in favour of                     publicity to the effect that &#8220;our pride and the vanity of                     our wives and families would impel us to pay the biggest income                     tax we could charge ourselves with.&#8221; The income tax forms                     proffer this opportunity to every citizen. Those who do not                     satisfy the Inspector of Income Tax at the first try will                     find the officials eager to help them in their plight.<\/p>\n<p>Imposed, like the British income tax, in a wartime emergency,                     the income tax is now an abiding part of the taxation structure.                     After many ups and downs since its imposition in 1917, it                     entered its era of greatest changes in 1941, a year of enhanced                     war dangers. The Minister of Finance told the House of Commons:                     &#8220;We have reached the conclusion that the rates of personal                     and corporation income taxes should be raised by the dominion                     to the maximum levels which would be reasonable at this time                     if the provinces were not in those fields&#8230;I shall outline                     proposals to increase the minimum rates of corporation income                     tax to 40 per cent; to increase the rates of personal income                     taxes very considerably, and to increase the national defence                     tax. But these increases, if taken together with the existing                     provincial rates, would result in too heavy a burden, and                     it is proposed, therefore, as a temporary expedient for the                     duration of the war only, to ask the provinces to vacate these                     two tax fields. The plan&#8230;will permit the dominion government                     to levy the necessary taxes without injustice to residents                     of different sections of the country, or to different income                     groups.&#8221; The provinces agreed to vacate the income tax field                     for the duration and for one year after termination of hostilities.<\/p>\n<p>To summarize the income tax changes during the war, a booklet                     entitled &#8220;Personal Income Tax&#8221; was prepared for the Dominion-Provincial                     Conference on Reconstruction which opened at Ottawa last August.                     It reported: &#8220;Individuals paid at the highest level in 1943.                     Although the rates of taxation reached their peak in 1942,                     the effective rate of tax was not at its greatest in that                     year owing to the forgiveness of one half the tax. Since 1943,                     all amendments of a major nature have been made generally                     to decrease the amount of tax payable by widening the scope                     of allowances and deductions and by removing the &#8216;savings&#8217;                     or &#8216;refundable&#8217; portion; the scale of rates has not changed                     since 1942 (other than by the removal of the &#8216;refundable portion&#8217;)                     and individuals have paid the same rate of actual tax (not                     including &#8216;savings&#8217;) since that time.&#8221; In December, 1945,                     the Government reduced the income tax by 16 per cent, allowing                     a deduction of 4 per cent from aggregate taxes due on incomes                     earned in that year.<\/p>\n<p>Taxation is the chief means by which a government obtains                     funds, and the tax represents a compulsory transfer of wealth                     from the individual to society. Wrapped up in this transfer                     is the danger that imposition of a tax may discourage production                     in private industry, because there will be less left for industry                     to spend on expansion of its facilities and less for individuals                     to invest in productive enterprise. This has to be taken into                     consideration as governments decide how much they should spend,                     how much they should borrow, and how much they should collect                     in taxes. Taxes are determined in the main by government expenditures.                     Some are forced, as in the case of war for the country&#8217;s preservation.                     Others are incurred by choice, such as social security expenditures                     and the amounts spent on public works. The inclination in                     late years is for people to seek satisfaction of more and                     more of their wants out of the public exchequer, and the state                     strives to meet these demands out of increased taxes.<\/p>\n<p>The pressure upon governments to spend money was summed                     up by the Minister of Finance in December when he admitted                     the difficulties he met in trying to economize: &#8220;We talk about                     putting a watch on expenditures, but how much assistance do                     we get in this House in watching expenditures? Nine-tenths                     of the speeches in this House are asking for bigger and better                     expenditures&#8230;If the Government is making large expenditures,                     it is not because the ministers are trying to make those expenditures;                     it is because of public and parliamentary demands for these                     expenditures. That is why the expenditures are being made.                     At times I feel as though I am against the whole world when                     I try to keep a lot of these expenditures down.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Accordingly, the income tax is here, apparently to stay                     so long as the people and their representatives in Parliament                     demand the expenditures. Income taxes, both individual and                     corporation, are among the government&#8217;s most flexible sources                     of revenue. By careful adjustment from year to year, say those                     who approve, income taxes can be made to yield revenues stated                     to the needs of the government. On the other hand, those opposed                     declare that it is false economy to increase corporation and                     individual taxation in lean years when the government needs                     money, such as in the case of a depression. Taking the increased                     levies means that capital is being removed, capital which                     might have been used to expand and improve the employment                     capacity of the country, and the results of taxation may be                     very far-reaching. The old English tax on windows led                     to such economy in the use of windows that the population                     was deprived of the light and air needed for health; the English                     corn laws brought some prosperity to the farmers, but reduced                     the diet of industrial workers.<\/p>\n<p>There is, to everyday people, an Alice in Wonderland aura                     around government finance. Most public bodies seem to subscribe                     to the purpose attributed to Mark Twain, that he &#8220;was resolved                     to live within his income even if he had to borrow to do it.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>As to the government&#8217;s method of collecting taxes, it resolves                     itself, in the broad sense, into a choice between direct and                     indirect taxation. A direct tax is one demanded from the persons                     who should pay it; indirect taxes are levied upon one person                     in the expectation that he will pass them on. It may be said                     by some that payment of indirect taxes is optional with the                     consumer, because he does not have to buy the goods in the                     price of which the taxes are included. He may give up smoking,                     if he resents strongly enough the increase in cost from about                     50 cents a half-pound of tobacco to 93 cents, and from                     free to 14 cents for a packet of cigarette papers. This is                     one reason why reliance upon consumption taxes is not always                     satisfactory. War experience showed that countries which relied                     heavily on indirect taxes found them a disappointment. They                     served to limit consumption, which was one desirable feature                     in wartime, but they did not thereby augment public revenue.                     Another argument against indirect taxes, and therefore in                     favour of such direct taxes as those on income, is that all                     indirect taxes press most heavily upon persons in the lower                     income brackets. Yet another reason against indirect taxes                     is their hidden nature, so that most people pay no attention                     to the toll they are paying, and therefore feel no responsibility                     for the expenditures of their governments. &#8220;There is more                     talk about income tax, which in 1944 yielded $1,037 million,                     than about all other taxes, which yielded $1,400 million,                     and this may undoubtedly be attributed to the fact that every                     dollar and cent of the income tax was seen and felt. To encourage                     wholesome vigilance by citizens, say those who oppose indirect                     taxation, people must be able to discover without difficulty                     what they have to pay and why.<\/p>\n<p>Incidence is one of the most complicated and important subjects                     in economic science. Unless there is proper analysis of the                     incidence of a tax, there can be no just opinion formed of                     its actual effect. There will undoubtedly be cases of inequity                     under all taxes, but if the overall system is well designed                     it should not as a whole bear inequitably on anyone or on                     any class. The first problem is to decide what justice and                     equality are. Some think taxation should be according to benefit,                     but the benefit accruing to an individual from the state cannot                     be measured. Others would make ability to pay the criterion,                     but this, like standards of living, is a flexible and changing                     thing, a loose term conditioned by all kinds of unexpected                     factors.<\/p>\n<p>People object to the intricate nature of the income tax                     report, but no plan of taxation can be both simple and fair.                     If due regard is to be paid to the impact of a tax upon every                     individual, considering the individual&#8217;s particular circumstances                     and needs, then a very complicated system of inquiry and assessment                     is needed. If everyone had to pay an equal tax of $50, regardless                     of circumstances, no inquiry or forms would be required, but                     such a tax would be obviously unfair. The political measure                     of equality means equality of proportional sacrifice, so that,                     by apportioning the contribution of each citizen toward the                     expenses of government, none shall feel more or less inconvenience                     from his share of the payment than anyone else. It has been                     admitted by ministers of finance repeatedly that this perfection                     cannot be completely realized, but it is always in the forefront                     of the minds of sincere governments, and the difficulty of                     doing perfect justice is no reason against doing as much as                     possible.<\/p>\n<p>Because a certain minimum of income is necessary to existence,                     tax laws provide that up to a fixed amount no taxation shall                     be levied. It is probably impossible to determine a precise                     amount, and the approximations vary with nations and times.                     Another reason for exemption of small incomes, a reason which                     has nothing to do with the principle, is the cost of collection.                     It costs no more to collect the 94 per cent which is charged                     on single status incomes over $100,660 than to collect the                     2 per cent which might be levied on incomes under $669. In                     other words, $235,000 can be collected on an income of $250,000                     with as little effort and cost as can $13.20 on an income                     of $660.<\/p>\n<p>Many regard the excess profits tax, corporation tax and                     succession duties as all falling under the general heading                     &#8220;income tax.&#8221; The Succession Duty Act came into force in 1941.                     It exempted estates of less than $5,000, and extended exemption                     to sums over that amount, varying, as did rates, according                     to the relationship of the beneficiary. Since the incidence                     of duties on transference of a person&#8217;s property at death                     is similar to that of general ad valorem property taxes, it                     has been argued that they should be used only for capital                     expenditures, and not to meet ordinary running expenses. Others,                     of course, regard taxes on estates as an instrument to break                     up fortunes on&nbsp;.the death of the original creator. These                     argue, in favour of their contention, that no person actually                     feels the weight of such taxation, because the deceased enjoyed                     his income up until his death, and his heirs never had the                     income. Still others contend that milking of estates by taxation                     will result in less effort being made to accumulate wealth,                     with consequent bad effects upon the economic life of the                     country.<\/p>\n<p>That business can be hurt by too heavy taxation seems evident,                     but there has been a marked tendency in recent years in the                     direction of taxing the right to carry on business, especially                     in the corporate form. The present complexity of corporation                     taxation, said the Royal Commission in 1940, &#8220;is beyond belief.&#8221;                     It pointed out that there were, in the way of taxes: the corporation                     income tax, levied by the Dominion and most provinces; taxes                     levied by one or more governments on capital stock, number                     of business places, gross revenue, physical volume of Output,                     period of operation, mileage of track or wire, mileage operated,                     note circulation, insurance premiums, investments, volume                     of deposits, and so on, according to the business of the taxpayer.                     &#8220;They have grown up in a completely unplanned and unco-ordinated                     way,&#8221; says the Commission report, &#8220;and violate every canon                     of sound taxation.&#8221; Corporation taxes may be based upon either                     income or capital structure. So long as the same system of                     taxation is applied to corporations in the same business,                     there may be approximate equality, but when one company happens                     to be in a different province from another, subject to different                     taxation, the result is to penalize one of the two by upsetting                     the basis of competition.<\/p>\n<p>The Excess Profits Tax Act of 1940 has as its objective                     the taxing of excess business profits occurring in an expended                     wartime economy. Standards were set on the three best years                     of the four-year period extending from 1936 to 1939.                     This tax is really in the nature of a special income tax,                     very remunerative to the government.<\/p>\n<p>Many persons wonder how much Canadians pay in income tax                     compared with people in other countries. The accompanying                     graph, based upon data in &#8220;Personal Income Taxes, a Reference                     Book for Dominion-Provincial Conference on Reconstruction,&#8221;                     supplies a partial answer. It would require many pages of                     figures to give a complete comparison embracing variable state                     and municipal taxes, exemptions and surtaxes, and taking account                     of the variation in cost of living by which the amount left                     after taxes is modified. However, this chart shows roughly                     the relativity between payments made by persons in various                     income brackets in four countries. A tax of 6.7 per cent on                     the first $1,500 of income in Canada compares with 19.1 in                     Australia, 10.7 in the United Kingdom, and 6.3 per cent in                     the United States, while at.S50,000 income the rates are 67.5,                     85.6, 70.0 and 60.6 per cent respectively.<\/p>\n<p>Since excessive taxation damps down enterprise, initiative                     and effort, it is advisable to make sure the income tax is                     carefully integrated with the whole life of the country. This                     is just as necessary if a view is taken from the government&#8217;s                     strong box as from the office of a business executive, because                     as a tax or tariff becomes completely absorbing, by its very                     nature it ceases to produce revenue. Industry is a living,                     progressing thing, and cannot be limited permanently to profits                     earned in a base period if it is to provide for the material                     wants of the people and the pecuniary wants of the government.                     It needs a continual supply of new capital, and over-taxation                     of individuals or corporations will kill the goose that lays                     the golden eggs. This seems obvious, but legislators and factions                     are often short-sighted as to the ultimate consequences                     of legislation. All idealistic visions to the contrary notwithstanding,                     the foundation of productive enterprise is laid through energy,                     skill, thrift, and expansion, and care must be taken not to                     paralyze these virtues through indiscreet taxation.<\/p>\n<p>When principles to be followed in taxing incomes, assessing                     various kinds of workers and striving for an equal distribution                     of tax responsibility have been established, the work of the                     administrative department is just beginning. The rules laid                     down by the legislators require a great deal of interpretation                     to fit all the cases which come before the collectors. Recent                     criticism has been directed toward the delays encountered                     in assessments and decisions, and the wide latitude allowed                     taxing officers. As to the first, all tax returns are supposed                     to be verified and assessed by departmental officers within                     a year of filing, but everyone knows that the wartime increase                     in returns has thrown the department back years. The last                     &#8220;pink slip&#8221; (final judgment on an income tax return) received                     by some T-1 taxpayers was for 1941. This quaint state                     of things, it is being argued, is a handicap to business,                     and there is agitation in some circles for a re-organization                     of the Income Tax Division with a view to bringing it, as                     well as the whole taxation system, up to date.<\/p>\n<p>With regard to administration discretion, both taxpayers                     and tax division men walk some fine chalk lines, though there                     is not so much room left as formerly for caprice in the handling                     of tax assessments. In a recent Supreme Court ruling the Department                     of National Revenue was sharply criticized for its wide discretionary                     powers, but the fault does not lie so much with individuals                     administering the Act as with the Act itself. It is a complicated                     accretion of regulations, amendments, and rulings, requiring                     a complete overhaul and codification.<\/p>\n<p>Much of the future depends upon sane taxation policies.                     The government, realizing this, has been ready to pledge that                     as soon as the Dominion&#8217;s proposals were accepted by the provinces,                     further reductions in income tax would be made, and that the                     element of double taxation in corporation income tax would                     be cut down. Taxes may be the sinews of the state, as Cicero                     said, but there are bounds, all governments have found, to                     the supply of medicine that builds the brawn of the state.                     Kings ought to shear, not skin, their sheep, and taxation                     should be based not only on the resources of the citizen,                     but on his ability to recuperate.<\/p>\n<p>To make the income tax consistent with justice and good                     sense, it should neither add to the hardships of those in                     the lower brackets, nor detract from the achievements of those                     in the upper range. Governments should be prepared to answer                     criticism of taxes of all kinds by pointing to necessary things                     done for the good of all society. Otherwise, they may find                     a lesson in an episode from Greek history: When Themistocles                     went to Andros seeking money, he warned that he had brought                     with him two goddesses, Persuasion and Force. He was answered                     that they, also, had two great goddesses, who prohibited them                     from giving any money. They were Poverty and Impossibility.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"author":79,"featured_media":0,"template":"","categories":[1],"rbc_letter_theme":[],"rbc_letter_year":[26],"class_list":["post-3615","rbc_letter","type-rbc_letter","status-publish","hentry","category-uncategorized","rbc_letter_year-26"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v27.4 (Yoast SEO v27.4) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-premium-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>April 1946 - Vol. 27, No. 4 - Income Tax - RBC<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/april-1946-vol-27-no-4-income-tax\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"April 1946 - Vol. 27, No. 4 - Income Tax - RBC\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"Spring is not only a time of young men&#8217;s fancies, of budding trees, and burgeoning flowers: it is also the open season for income tax returns and payments. 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