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Income tax system fails to correct growing inequality

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This blog post is part of a series of posts that will be focusing on the tax avoidance by Canada’s most wealthy. This series was sparked by findings in the Paradise Papers — the latest leak that revealed the offshore tax haven activities of former Canadian elected officials and political insiders. Tax avoidance is wrong. It robs the Canadian government from paying for and maintaining our health and social programs; ones that work to improve the lives of all Canadians. A government crackdown on offshore tax havens is urgent and necessary.

Data from the 2016 Census show that income inequality grew quite significantly over the previous decade from 2005 to 2015, and that the supposedly most progressive part of our overall tax system failed to make much of a difference. This underlines the need for progressive tax reform in the next federal budget.

One key way of thinking about income inequality is to look at the gap between the middle and the top of the income distribution. Here we look at the incomes of working age persons ranked by deciles. Every person is assigned to one of ten equal sized income groups, ranked from the lowest 10% to the top 10% of all persons on the basis of after tax income adjusted for family size.

Data are available on income, sources of income and income tax paid for each decile over time, and also for the median, the mid point of the distribution such that one half of Canadians have higher incomes and one half have lower incomes.

While the Census showed that most Canadians benefited from income gains compared to 2005, the top 10% grew away from the middle as has mainly been the case since the 1980s. Other sources of data show that income within the top 10% is itself highly concentrated in the hands of the top 1% and an even smaller group of the ultra affluent.

The median working age adult had a total pre tax income of $34,204 in 2015, up  $3,845 or 12.7% from 2005. (The income gain is adjusted for inflation.) Median income after income tax was up $3,250 or 11.8%.

While this was a welcome gain in real incomes, the increase was greater among higher income groups.

Working age adults in the top 10% had an average total pre tax income of  $128,271 in 2015, up $18,394 or 16.7% from 2005. Income after tax for this top group was up by 16.1% to an average of $94,390

One way of measuring inequality is to look at the average total or pre tax income of the top 10% compared to median income. This ratio was 3.75 in 2015, up from 3.6 in 2005. In other words, the top 10% have incomes which are now on average 3.75 times greater than the median.

The ratio of the after tax income of the top 10% to the median is lower than for total pre tax income – 3.0 in 2015. However, this a fairly modest reduction in inequality from a ratio of 3.75o 3.0% before and after income tax is taken into account.. And the ratio of the after tax income of the top 10% compared to the median has risen a bit, from 2.9 in 2005 to 3.0 in 2015.

We can also calculate the effective income tax rate paid by the top 10% compared to the median. In 2015, total income tax paid by the top 10% as a percentage of their total income was 26.4% compared to 18.5% for the median working age adult. The effective tax rate on the top 10% was unchanged from 2005.

The affluent certainly pay a higher share of their income in taxes than most Canadians, but the difference is not all that great. This is partly because we tax individuals rather than families, and the family circumstances of the top 10% vary.

It should be borne in mind that the personal income tax is the only major progressive part of the overall tax system through which those with higher incomes pay proportionately more. By contrast, sales taxes are regressive since all persons pay the same rate of tax, and the affluent spend a smaller share of their income on taxable goods and services.

The top 10% (and even more so, the top 1% and higher) benefit from the fact that investment income is generally taxed at a much lower rate than earnings. Just one half of capital gains and stock option gains are included in taxable income, and dividends are also taxed at a favourable rate.

The Trudeau government promised progressive tax reform to close the growing gap between the very affluent and the middle-class. In fairness, they have raised the very top income tax rate, but they also cut the next to top tax rate which benefits mainly the top 10%, and have to date failed to deliver on reform to tax loopholes which mainly benefit the top 1%.

More certainly needs to be done if the personal income tax system is to hold growing income inequality in check.

 

Andrew Jackson is Adjunct Research Professor in the Institute of Political Economy at Carleton University, and senior policy adviser to the Broadbent Institute