Border tax demise may relieve pressure to reduce Canada’s corporate taxes
The Trump administration’s decision to drop a proposed border tax removes the threat of a trade war just as Canada, Mexico and the U.S. prepare to launch negotiations for a new North American Free Trade Agreement, relieved Canadian business leaders say.
But it also potentially reduces the pressure on Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to slash Canada’s corporate tax rate to keep pace with a promised steep reduction in the United States.
The border adjustment tax was intended to offset the massive revenue hole President Donald Trump’s planned comprehensive tax reform — including cutting the corporate tax rate to 15 per cent — will blow in the American budget.
“With this taken out of it, it will be interesting to see what this means for the overall package, what is the size of the corporate tax cut, for example, that’s been discussed,” said Brian Kingston, the Business Council of Canada’s vice-president of policy, international and fiscal issues


