I certainly think that there will be a time to come in the next couple of years to start to examine new revenue measures. Broadly, when we start to look at new revenue measures, I think one of the things to understand is that this pandemic has not been bad for everyone.
Financially, there are certain firms in certain sectors that just happened to be on the right side of the pandemic and have made record profits as a result. As a result of firms making record profits, CEOs attached to those firms will make record profits. Even CEOs working for companies that did not make record profits will still likely see massive bonuses at the end of the year as the rules are changed, such that if the economy does really well, CEOs get massive bonuses, and if the economy does badly, they change the rules so that CEOs get massive bonuses in any event.
Then we come to the issue of wealth taxation. Again, for the highest decile of Canadians, this recession was over in July. Jobs had completely recovered for people in the top quarter of earnings. Also, for the top 1%, asset values had increased, based on stock market valuations as well as real estate valuations. This has not been bad for everyone.
I think that as a general principle we should certainly be considering things like a wealth tax, and Canada is the only country in the G7 that doesn't have an inheritance tax. Every other major country does have an inheritance tax. A wealth tax would have to be built on lessons learned through inheritance taxes elsewhere. It's easy to make wealth taxes that are terrible in terms of their implementation, but that isn't to say that we shouldn't try to learn from lessons from other countries to build more effective wealth taxes.
I think other things that we might want to start considering are things like a surplus profits tax, again, for the corporate sector or sections of the corporate sector that have done very well from the pandemic, as well as, potentially, new top marginal tax rates for individuals, again for people like CEOs who will see record bonuses out of this.
I think it is worth questioning who should, in part, contribute to the pandemic. The people who've done the best, at the very high end of the income spectrum, I think should be asked to contribute some of what they've gained, so that other people, particularly low-income Canadians, are more likely to get support and more likely to get a job.