No. I think the biggest issue, as many in small business and/or agriculture would recognize, is that there's no recognition of the involvement of someone at a Hutterite colony under the age of 18. So if you take a child who is 14 or 15 years old, who is working actively in the farming operation, helping in the hog barn, the dairy barn, or on the farm, the colony is not permitted to either pay a salary or wage to that person and/or not put any income in that person's hands for the allocation of taxable income.
As a result, anyone under the age of 18 at a Hutterite colony is a tax nothing. In Canada's tax system, with federal non-refundable tax credits of approximately $9,000 per person, and in Alberta, non-refundable tax credits of about $15,000 per person, that inability to allocate income to someone who is very actively involved in the business creates that huge tax gap. All other farmers, all other businessmen, can allocate an amount to anyone involved in the business, provided the amount is reasonable for the amount of effort and contribution of effort expended by that person, so that's where the gap comes from. There's this inability to recognize anyone under the age of 18.