/r/CanadaPolitics

Photograph via snooOG

Polite discussions about Canadian politics.


Notre sub est bilingue, veuillez soumettre vos articles et vos postes dans la langue officielle qui vous plaît.

Moderators will not remove any posts based on opinion. We will, however, remove posts we believe detract from the conversation, as described in the rules below.


Rules

(This is a summary. You can find the full text of the rules here.)

  1. Headline titles should be changed only when the original headline is unclear.

  2. Be respectful.

  3. Keep submissions and comments substantive.

  4. Avoid direct advocacy.

  5. Link submissions must be about Canadian politics and recent.

  6. Post only one news article per story. (with one exception)

  7. Replies to removed comments or removal notices will be removed without notice, at the discretion of the moderators.

  8. Downvoting posts or comments, along with urging others to downvote, is not allowed in this subreddit. Bans will be given on the first offence.

  9. Do not copy & paste the entire content of articles in comments. If you want to read the contents of a paywalled article, please consider supporting the media outlet.

If you wish to dispute a moderator's action, please message the moderation team.



Tips

  • Do not use URL shorteners. The spam filter may get upset.

  • If you report a link, please explain why, either by leaving a brief note under "other" as the report reason, or by messaging the moderators.

  • Self-posts to spur discussion or debate are encouraged; please see our guidelines.

  • Please submit the non-mobile/non-AMP version of articles whenever possible.

  • Please avoid mentioning anticipated downvotes on your posts ("I'm going to get downvoted for this, but..."). Downvoting isn't allowed in /r/CanadaPolitics.

  • Read the reddiquette.



Previous AMAs

Past election AMA series
View All Previous AMAs


Sister Reddits


Resources


Other Reddits

/r/CanadaPolitics

229,987 Subscribers

0

Reduce Income Tax - Idea

Hey everyone! I’ve been thinking about how we could give Canadians more disposable income while still keeping government revenue strong. Here’s a tax structure idea I came up with that might strike a good balance:

  1. Significant Income Tax Cuts:

5% Income Tax for Households up to $120k: This would give low- and middle-income families a big break, letting them keep more of their earnings.

15% for Incomes up to $260k: A reasonable tax for upper-middle-income earners that doesn’t stifle spending.

30% for $260k and Above: Those with high incomes would contribute more but still have plenty of disposable income.

  1. Corporate Tax Set at 20%: A fair rate that keeps Canada competitive globally while ensuring businesses contribute their share.

  2. New GST Categories:

5% on Absolute Essentials: Basics like groceries and necessary goods stay affordable.

15% on Less Essential Items: Things that aren’t luxury but aren’t necessities either (like most consumer goods) would have a moderate GST.

25% on Luxury Goods: High-end items, luxury cars, and other non-essentials would see a 25% GST, contributing more without affecting everyday spending.

How This Could Help:

More Disposable Income: With lower income tax, households keep more of what they earn, boosting spending, savings, and investments.

Fairer Tax Structure: People pay based on their consumption choices, not just income level. High earners and those spending on luxury items contribute more, while essentials stay affordable.

Stronger Economy: More disposable income means more spending, which drives growth and could support local businesses and job creation.

This setup could make a real difference by putting more money in people’s pockets and simplifying the tax burden on essentials. It would encourage people to spend where it matters and help keep the cost of living reasonable. Thoughts?

Also, this system already works in Gulf states and there infrastructure is much better.

I believe the socialist policies aren't gonna work with all the trouble that Canada is facing right now and people are sick of giving away the money to the government and receiving peanuts as handouts while waiting outside emergency rooms.

Open up the school and the medical system and let people make their own choices to go for private services if needed.

Also, why are we letting Jagmeet Singh hold back the entire country for his pension and come out on the streets for calling an early election. Right now, there is no suitable candidate but PP can deliver more than this current administration. So let's go out on the streets across provinces and force the MPs to listen to the public and call for an early election. It's a democracy after all.

13 Comments
2024/11/09
05:36 UTC

0

What could some positive financial benefits be for Canada over the next four years?

I’m trying to stay positive and focus on what could be beneficial to Canada over the next few years.

So, this is a genuine question: Could 100% tariffs on certain countries and industries be a benefit to Canada? Could Canada somehow leverage that to improve our trade deficit (or surplus)? I don’t know enough about the fine mechanics of tariffs to understand.

What are some other potential economic positives?

20 Comments
2024/11/09
02:50 UTC

Back To Top