Thank you, Mr. Chair.
The Status of the Artist Act should recognize the legitimacy of businesses operated by professional artists. Those businesses do not have the same expectation of profit as all other businesses. Too often, their status as businesses is questioned by the Canada Revenue Agency because their income is so much less than expenses and they have recurring operating losses.
Professional artists' incomes are essentially composed of grants, often in the form of fellowships, royalties from their works, and the sale of works. They depend primarily on grants in order to produce artistic works or projects, those grants being made by peer committees established by organizations such as the Canada Council for the Arts. So that source of income may vary widely from one year to the next, depending on the projects submitted to those organizations. As a result, artists' incomes depend on government assistance. That is quite often what allows them to survive and to create, sometimes in very difficult financial circumstances.
The CRA should become more familiar with the operation of these types of business so that it has a better understanding of their income. It should have a separate tax slip or a separate box on the T4A slip for arts projects, to avoid any confusion about how this type of income is treated and reported, for both professional artists and the people who prepare tax returns at CRA. At present, grants and fellowships are reported in the same box on the T4A slip. These grants should be reported on form T2125, not on line 13010, which also includes the value of scholarships.
A specific deduction should be allowed for grants that have been received but for which expenses remain to be incurred. At present, professional artists are having to pay tax on any balance of grants received for which expenses remain to be incurred in the next year. The pandemic has accentuated this phenomenon because creation centres closed and this delayed the creation of the projects funded.
The revision of the act should be accompanied by new tax measures to support professional artists in their practice and encourage the public to consume Canadian cultural products, because that contributes directly to the health of this industry. Some of these measures are already in place at Revenu Québec, in fact.
A tax deduction for copyright could be offered on royalties generated by the works of professional artists, to reduce a portion of the tax on this type of income.
Since a professional artist's income varies significantly, depending on the projects completed, purchase of an income-averaging annuity should be available to reduce the taxation of any exceptional income by averaging that income over several fiscal years.
To encourage the consumption of cultural products, the CRA should allow a deduction for accelerated depreciation for the purchase of works of art by Canadian artists, by businesses that want to support professional artists. At present, the Income Tax Act provides a 20% depreciation rate for this type of property.
The purchase of season tickets consisting of at least three performances should be 100% deductible as entertainment expenses for businesses.
A tax credit for the purchase of cultural property should be offered to all taxpayers, to encourage the consumption of our culture in Canada.
As a final point, there should be an order that 1% of the total budget for the construction of government and municipal buildings be allocated to the purchase of works of art created by professional artists, who could apply through nation-wide public art competitions.
These are a few of my observations arising out of my practice as a chartered professional accountant working with professional artists in Canada.