Thank you so much. Good afternoon. My name is Debi Daviau. I am president of The Professional Institute of the Public Service of Canada, or PIPS, the national union that represents approximately 1,400 Canada Revenue Agency professionals in Quebec. Overall, we represent some 12,000 auditors at the Canada Revenue Agency across the country.
With me today is Mr. Jean Couillard, our representative for our group at CRA, and he is our representative for the Quebec region. He is a CPA and a CGA and a subject matter expert on CRA-related issues.
We'd like to thank you for the opportunity to present our views on Bill C-224 and on the possibility of transferring tax processing from the Canada Revenue Agency to Revenu Québec. Together, we would be happy to answer any and all questions you may have after our presentation.
I want to assure committee members that we have thoroughly researched this issue. Our position is based on substantial academic and expert literature. In a nutshell, Bill C-224 is not in the best interests of Canadians and Quebeckers, and there are alternatives to transferring this responsibility to Revenu Québec. We urge members of Parliament to carefully review our arguments and decide if this is really the road to follow, especially at this time. Why? Because it would have a negative financial impact on taxpayers across Canada, and it would not result in tax-processing efficiencies for residents of Quebec. It's a step backward in the fight against tax evasion. It's a move away from tax fairness. Finally, it would lead to the loss of high-quality jobs in Shawinigan and Jonquière, two smaller provincial communities already hard hit by the pandemic.
I'd like to emphasize that we are not the only ones to take this position. Academic and expert literature on this issue demonstrates that there is no clear evidence that decentralization of Canadian tax administration to a provincial authority would result in greater aggregate savings, efficiency, compliance or accountability, as compared to centralizing the administration of provincial taxes at the CRA.
Please note that we can provide committee members, and any member of Parliament, with our list of these studies and references upon request.
I'd like to address each of our arguments individually.
First, the numbers don't add up. There are no savings or efficiencies to be gained either for Quebec taxpayers or for those in the rest of Canada. The June 2015 report of the Commission de révision permanente des programmes, which was commissioned by the provincial government itself to look into this and other issues related to government spending and efficiency, found that the most efficient and cost-effective way for Quebeckers to have a single tax return would be for the CRA to administer all tax collection. Plus, a shift from the CRA to Revenu Québec would require a significant expansion of the latter's capacity as well as an expansion of its administration budget. The CRA is already in a position to centralize Quebec's tax administration.
Second, it represents a step backward in the fight against tax evasion. We know that other provinces are watching to see what happens with Bill C-224. We believe that if it is adopted, the bill could lead to a balkanization of Canada's tax system, resulting in more regressive taxes and weakened enforcement of measures aimed at combatting tax avoidance amongst wealthy Canadians and large corporations. Also, because international agreements aimed at fighting tax evasion are signed between central governments, it would be difficult for Quebec to perform the federal government's work in this area without a great many treaties being redrafted. This could lead to increased tax evasion at a time when billions of dollars are sitting offshore that the government is trying to recuperate. This is money that is badly needed to fund the public programs and services that Canadians depend on every day.
Third, it's a move away from tax fairness. Progressivity in Canada's tax system largely stems from federal taxes. This is even more the case now, as the federal government has introduced more progressive tax measures at both the top and bottom ends of the income spectrum. These measures are delivered through Canada's existing tax system. Their administration would be far more complicated if individual provincial agencies became involved. If we are to have a fairer and more progressive tax system in Canada, it must come from the federal level of government. We can't depend on provincial governments, which are by nature and by economic imperatives more constrained in what they can do.
Historically, the shift to a tax-on-income basis for provincial income taxes rather than as a percentage of federal taxes gave them more flexibility to set their own rates. This led to many putting into place considerably less progressive income tax systems.
Of course administration and collection of taxes are different from tax policy-making, but further devolution of the administration and collection of taxes will inevitably lead to a greater devolution of tax policy-making and to a less progressive tax system overall.
Finally, it’s critical that we not lose sight of the impact this could have on employment in Shawinigan and Jonquière, where the Canada Revenue Agency provides good jobs to a great many people. I can’t think of a worse time than the middle of a pandemic to start thinking about cutting jobs in smaller communities. The CRA is a governmental leader in the decentralization of its jobs. They are not all concentrated in the national capital region, as is often the case with federal jobs. They may not be easily redeployed to other departments.
To conclude, Bill C-224 should not be adopted. A better way to go, if we want to have less paperwork and a lighter tax-filing burden on individuals and ensure that people get the benefits they are entitled to, would be to have automatic tax filing. This is something the Trudeau government has committed to implementing. We support that initiative, and the CRA has the capacity to effectively process Quebec taxes as it already does for the other provinces.
I want to thank you for your time. Mr. Couillard and I would be pleased to answer your questions