Montreal Gazette

MULCAIR’S TAX PROMISE

Vows to keep 15% credit

- GIUSEPPE VALIANTE

Tom Mulcair says an NDP government would reinstate a tax credit for people who invest in unionspons­ored venture capital firms.

A Montreal crowd of business and union leaders listened Thursday as the NDP leader outlined his party’s plan for sustainabl­e economic growth, which includes bringing back the 15 per cent tax credit.

The Conservati­ve government announced in its 2013 budget that the tax credit program would be phased out by 2017.

They said the program was “criticized by academics, internatio­nal organizati­ons as well as venture capital industry stakeholde­rs as being an ineffectiv­e means of stimulatin­g a healthy venture capital sector.”

The government replaced it with a $400 million “Venture Capital Action Plan.”

Mulcair called the cut “a purely ideologica­l decision” that “hurts the economy” during a speech at the Board of Trade of Metropolit­an Montreal.

He added the 15 per cent tax credit “helps working families to save and invest in the small- and medium-sized businesses that are the backbone of our regional economies.”

The Liberal Party of Canada made a similar announceme­nt to reinstate the tax credit in February.

An example of a union-sponsored venture capital corporatio­n is Quebec Federation of Labour’s Solidarity Fund, which was created in 1983 by one of the province’s largest labour unions.

The NDP says it will bring back the program that gave a 15 per cent federal tax credit for investment­s of up to $5,000.

The fund invests mainly outside the province’s large cities and in projects that have difficulty securing financing.

The NDP says it will bring back the program that gave a 15 per cent federal tax credit for investment­s of up to $5,000 in union-sponsored venture capital firms.

A spokesman for Finance Minister Joe Oliver said in an email the credit “was not working to produce jobs and growth.”

Mulcair also reiterated earlier promises to cut the small business tax rate by two points to 9 per cent.

Additional­ly, an NDP government would boost funding for infrastruc­ture by $400 million over four years to $3.7 billion, he said.

Mulcair added he’ll also transfer an additional 1 per cent of the gas tax to the provinces and end the Conservati­ve government’s latest income-splitting proposal, which he says only benefits the richest families.

The federal NDP is riding high in the polls that suggest they are in first place in Quebec and have a strong chance at winning government in the fall.

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 ?? PAUL CHIASSON/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? NDP leader Tom Mulcair called the cut of the tax credit “a purely ideologica­l decision.”
PAUL CHIASSON/THE CANADIAN PRESS NDP leader Tom Mulcair called the cut of the tax credit “a purely ideologica­l decision.”

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