this post was submitted on 01 Mar 2025
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This Black History Month, it’s important to recognize that economic injustice—both in Canada and around the world—is deeply rooted in racism. The property system in Canada was founded on the forced displacement and exclusion of Indigenous peoples from their land and immigration policies that prevented non-white immigration, effectively barring many thousands of people from accessing property in Canada. These racialized colonial systems laid the foundation for the current racial wealth gap, where racialized Canadians have about half as much wealth as their non-racialized counterparts.

Unlike the United States, where constitutional barriers have historically shielded the ultra-rich from direct taxation, Canada faces no such constitutional legal obstacles—only political ones. And those political excuses are running out.

A wealth tax enjoys overwhelming public support. Nearly 90 percent of Canadians back it, yet successive Liberal and Conservative governments have refused to act. Their refusal isn’t due to legal constraints but to the immense influence of corporate lobbyists and billionaire donors who oppose any effort to make them pay their fair share.

Just last year, powerful corporate interests mobilized to kill a progressive tax measure that would have primarily targeted Canada’s wealthiest citizens and corporations: the partial closure of the capital gains loophole.

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[–] [email protected] 32 points 1 day ago (1 children)

A wealth tax would be great. I was surprised at how effectively rich assholes shut down the tiny fixes to the capital gains loophole. Expect a flight.

[–] [email protected] 28 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago) (1 children)

If rich people can avoid paying taxes through the use of loopholes (see the Canadian list in the Panama Papers) I don't understand why gov'ts would worry about them leaving. I mean they're not paying their fair share anyway, so fuck 'em.

[–] nik282000 6 points 1 day ago (1 children)

They aren't paying their fair share of taxes. The wealthy pay politicians both monetary and non-monetary bribes a significantly smaller sum than the taxes they avoid. If the bribes were more than the taxes they would just pay the taxes.

[–] [email protected] 5 points 1 day ago

The tax code architecture is inherently flawed... labour income is taxed higher than capital income. Capital income surplus is than accumulated in stocks. Most of labour does not get much if any surplus income to invest.

But you are not wrong, you are just looking at the shit the rich try to steal on top of this inherent privileged treatment. But even if close ALL of the loops holes, the system is flawed esp at the wealth concentration we currently have across developed economies but esp US.