BCBusiness

March 2016 The Most Influential Women in B.C.

With a mission to inform, empower, celebrate and advocate for British Columbia's current and aspiring business leaders, BCBusiness go behind the headlines and bring readers face to face with the key issues and people driving business in B.C.

Issue link: http://digital.canadawide.com/i/637065

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 15 of 71

16 BCBUSINESS MARCH 2016 ISTOCK A Tax on All Their Houses T h e M a t r i x A tax on changes to property title, which many in real estate argue to be antiquated and burdensome, has become a major windfall for the provincial government by Jacob Parry W hen the B.C. government introduced the property transfer tax in the late '80s—and started collecting a percentage on each home sold—it was a way to catch a little wind from the property boom. Almost 30 years on, groups like the B.C. Real Estate Association would like to see the tax axed, arguing that it contributes to housing unaffordability and that its rates are out of sync with today's market. While Premier Christy Clark has mused about scrapping the tax eventually, her finance minister, Mike de Jong, has conversely suggested that increasing the tax could dampen speculative investments. Whatever its destiny, the tax is now a big source of revenue for the government—over $1 billion in the last fiscal year (2014-15)—as well as for others across Canada. B.C. TORONTO MONTREAL/QUEBEC CITY THE TAX THE TAKE THE CRITIC SOURCE: B.C. MINISTRY OF FINANCE s 1% on first $200,000 of the sale price s 2% on the rest s Introduced in 1987 $1 BILLION s $432 MILLION s $1.3 BILLION $154 MILLION s A combined 4% on the value of sale; half goes to the City of Toronto, half to the province s Introduced in 2008 to the City of Toronto in 2015 to the province in 2015 to the City of Montreal in 2015 s 1.5% on the portion of the sale price between $250,000-$500,000 s 2% on portion between $500,000-$1 million s 2.5% on the value of the house over $1 million s Introduced in 1992 to the B.C. government in 2014/15 "B.C. has the dubious distinction of the least competitive real estate transfer tax in the world" —Cameron Muir, chief economist, B.C. Real Estate Association "Most councillors want to keep this unfair tax and keep spending the millions it brings in" —Rob Ford, former mayor of Toronto "By separating the assets, the spouse who acquires the house has to pay the transfer tax. How does that make sense?" —Régis Labeaume, mayor of Quebec City Revenues from B.C.'s property transfer tax 2015 $1.039 billion 2014 $928 million 2013 $899 million 2012 $778 million 2011 $850 million 2010 $810 million

Articles in this issue

Archives of this issue

view archives of BCBusiness - March 2016 The Most Influential Women in B.C.