Good afternoon, everyone.
My name is Claire Trottier, and I'm a philanthropist, investor and tax justice advocate. Thank you so much for the invitation to speak to this committee.
I'm here today as a wealthy Canadian who is very accustomed to earning capital gains, and I am very strongly in favour of the change to the inclusion rate that this committee is currently studying. I am part of the 1% because I won the lottery of life by being born into my family. My father, Lorne Trottier, is the co-founder and now sole owner of a technology company called Matrox, based in Montreal, that will soon celebrate its 50th anniversary.
I believe in a strong Canadian economy in which every Canadian can live with dignity. Unfortunately, wealth inequality exists in Canada and continues to grow. More and more people struggle to find adequate housing and have trouble contending with the exploding price of groceries. Increasing the inclusion rate on capital gains is a positive step to start addressing an unequal system and to raise revenue to provide needed services.
I am a scientist by training. I earned my Ph.D. in microbiology and immunology, and I was a professor at McGill for a number of years when I made the decision to leave in order to focus on philanthropy and overseeing family investments.
When I was a professor, I earned $90,000 per year as my income from my salary, and 100% of that salary was taxable because salaries have a 100% inclusion rate. However, when I earn $90,000 in capital gains, only 50% is taxable; $45,000 is tax free. That means that the income that I earned as a salaried employee at McGill was taxed at a higher level than the income that I earned from the same amount of money as capital gains. I find that situation deeply unfair. Do you?
If you are declaring capital gains, it means that you have capital to begin with. Whether it's a second home, a business or investment in the stock market, you are doing better financially than the average Canadian, even if you aren't as rich as I am.
It's a little weird that if you have enough capital to make capital gains, our tax policy essentially rewards your financial success with a prize. “Congrats. You're rich. Now you don't need to pay as much tax as everyone else.” This is deeply unfair. People who earn a salary have a 100% inclusion rate on their salary, but if you have enough money that you are actually declaring capital gains, you get this bonus prize of not having to pay tax on all of that income.
Right now—before the change in the inclusion rate being studied—50% of capital gains are tax free. With this change, for the first $250,000 of capital gains, you still get 50% tax free. For any income that you receive beyond $250,000, one-third of that income continues to be tax free. Therefore, even with this change, I will still be paying less tax on my income from capital gains than folks pay on their salaries. I and other rich folks are continuing to get this special deal whereby some of our income is tax free; we're just going to pay a bit more tax than we did before.
I've heard folks say that this will kill the technology sector and innovation in Canada. As part of my work on tax justice, I've heard from many young Canadian tech CEOs leading brand new businesses, and what I've heard is that this capital gains inclusion rate is just not on the top list of their concerns.
My family's company is a very successful technology company, and we continue to invest in the business, to invest in R and D, to invest in innovation, with tens of millions of dollars being invested every single year in Montreal. When making decisions about whether or not to invest in developing a new product, the capital gains inclusion rate is just not something that is part of the discussion at all. The bigger shared concern for emerging and established tech companies is recruitment and retention of qualified employees. As previous witnesses have shared to this committee, the period when Canada saw the highest R and D spending was when the inclusion rate was between 66.7% and 75%.
The fact is that our current system has created massive inequality in our society, and this change to the inclusion rate for capital gains is one important step to help make things more fair. This is not about punishing business owners or making wealthy people feel guilty. We have to collectively recognize that if we own assets and these assets grow in value, we are very lucky. We pay lower tax on income from capital gains than people pay on their salary income. This change simply addresses that policy to make it a bit more equitable.
I would be proud to pay more than I do today to ensure that we have a fairer tax system and a fairer society. I am also proud to collaborate with the group Patriotic Millionaires, which brings together wealthy individuals from around the world—including many here in Canada—to advocate taxing the rich. Surveys show that a majority of Canadians support the idea of taxing the rich, and I am glad that this change to the inclusion rate for capital gains will help fund much-needed programs that benefit all Canadians.
Thank you.