Archive for the 'canada' Category

G20 Protests

Today was an event­ful day in Canada. Canada hosted the G20 sum­mit in Toronto. Unfor­tu­nately, some pro­tes­tors were unhappy and that led them to com­mit chaos on our streets. These chaos resulted in mil­lions in repairable and non-repairable dam­age to our gov­ern­ment, small busi­nesses and corporations!

Con­tinue read­ing ‘G20 Protests’

The HST and You!

In around two weeks, the tax­a­tion sys­tem of British Colum­bia and Ontario will be changed. The cur­rent GST (Goods and Ser­vices Tax) and the PST (Provin­cial Sales Tax) will be merged into the HST (Har­mo­nized Sales Tax). The HST is not a new tax. The per­cent­age of tax­a­tion will still remain 12%, the low­est HST per­cent­age in Canada!

This sales tax is imple­mented by the Provin­cial gov­ern­ment of British Colum­bia and the Fed­eral gov­ern­ment of Canada. This form of tax­a­tion will begin on July 1, 2010 – the 143rd birth­day of Canada.

The Har­mo­nized Sales Tax is a more trans­par­ent form of tax­a­tion. Under the PST/GST sys­tem, PST is paid at every trans­ac­tion. The cost of PST paid in those trans­ac­tions are car­ried to the price of the final prod­uct. When you buy the final prod­uct, you will have paid more than one level of PST on top of the GST and PST that you pay at the store. The HST elim­i­nates embed­ded PST and you will only pay one sales tax – when you buy it at the con­sumer level. Please feel free to see this chart for more explanation.

The BC gov­ern­ment esti­mates that intro­duc­ing the HST to replace the PST and GST will remove over $2 bil­lion in costs for BC busi­nesses. Instead of doing two tax forms, busi­nesses will only have to fill out one tax form. This sav­ing to BC Busi­nesses will most likely be passed on to the employ­ees (more jobs, higher wages and salaries) and con­sumers (lower prices due to competition).

The HST will com­pletely elim­i­nate the 10% liquor con­sump­tion tax and the 7% to 10% lux­ury tax on auto­mo­biles. This means that you will save money when you buy your next batch of alco­hol at the liquor store, bar or pubs. It will also mean that you will save money when you buy your next BMW, Mercedes-Benz and other lux­ury cars.

Stud­ies have shown that coun­tries that have not embraced a VAT tax­a­tion sys­tem have higher prices at the domes­tic con­sumer level and higher prices at the export level mak­ing indus­tries less com­pet­i­tive. British Colum­bia is the gate­way of Canada to Asia. We need to make our goods and ser­vices more com­pet­i­tive to attract invest­ments from other countries.

Com­par­i­son of Sales Tax in Canada

In Canada, you pay 5% GST regard­less of which province you are in.

  • British Colum­bia has 7% PST, 10% liquor con­sump­tion tax, and a 7% to 10% lux­ury tax based on pur­chase price.
  • Alberta has no provin­cial sales tax but has a 4% PST on lodging.
  • Saskatchewan has 5% PST and a 10% liquor con­sump­tion tax.
  • Man­i­toba has a 7% PST.
  • Ontario has a 8% PST, 10% enter­tain­ment and alco­hol tax at restau­rants, 12% on alco­hol at retail stores. It has a 5% PST on lodg­ing. Que­bec will also intro­duce the HST on July 1, 2010 but with 13% as opposed to 12.
  • Que­bec has a 7.5% PST applied to the price of the prod­uct and/or ser­vice and the GST. The PST will be increased to 8.5% on Jan­u­ary 1, 2011 and will increase again to 9.5% on Jan­u­ary 1, 2012.
  • Prince Edward Island has a 10% PST applied on top of the price of the prod­uct and/or ser­vice and the GST.
  • New Brunswick has a 13% HST.
  • Nova Sco­tia has a 13% HST but will be increased to 15% on July 1, 2010.
  • New­found­land and Labrador has a 13% HST.

Prior to the Stephen Harper Con­ser­v­a­tive gov­ern­ment, the GST and HST were 2% higher than the current.

Rebates and HST Credits

In British Colum­bia, low income fam­i­lies (under $25,000) and indi­vid­u­als (under $20,000) will receive a $230 credit. This is a sig­nif­i­cant increase from the cur­rent GST rebate, paid the fifth day of Jan­u­ary, April, July and October.

Used homes are not sub­ject to the HST. new homes over $525,000 will receive a max­i­mum rebate of $26,250. New home buy­ers will not pay more in taxes than they would have under the old embed­ded PST system.

Exemp­tions

All goods and ser­vices exempted from the GST will be exempted from the HST:

  • basic gro­ceries
  • pre­scrip­tion drugs
  • res­i­den­tial rent

In addi­tion, the BC provin­cial por­tion of the sales tax that are exempt are:

  • Gaso­line, Ethanol, Diesel, Bio-diesel when used in motor vehi­cles as well as loco­mo­tive fuel used for trains, marine diesel used for boats, and avi­a­tion fuel and jet fuel used for aircrafts.
  • Books
  • Children-sized cloth­ing and footwear
  • Children’s car seats and car booster seats
  • Dia­pers
  • Fem­i­nine Hygiene Products

Zero-Rated Goods and Ser­vices (you pay 0% HST)

  • basic gro­ceries such as milk, bread, and vegetables.
  • agri­cul­tural prod­ucts such as grain, raw wool, and dried tobacco leaves.
  • most farm livestock.
  • most fish­ery prod­ucts such as fish for human consumption.
  • pre­scrip­tion drugs and drug-dispensing fees.
  • med­ical devices such as hear­ing aids; heart-monitoring devices; hos­pi­tal beds; breath­ing appa­ra­tus; asth­matic devices; pre­scrip­tion eyeglasses/contact lenses; arti­fi­cial eyes; arti­fi­cial teeth such as den­tures, crowns and bridges, ortho­don­tic appli­ances; aids to loco­mo­tion such as a chair, com­mode chair, walker, wheel­chair lift or other aid to loco­mo­tion for use by an indi­vid­ual with a dis­abil­ity; patient lifters; wheel­chair ramp; portable wheel­chair ramp; mod­i­fy­ing motor vehi­cles to adapt the vehi­cle for the trans­porta­tion of an indi­vid­ual using a wheel­chair; pre­scrip­tion orthotic and orthopaedic devices; prosthesis/devices; canes or crutches; arti­cles for blind indi­vid­u­als; guide dogs for blind indi­vid­u­als and hear­ing ear dogs; sup­plies and ser­vices related to med­ical and assis­tive devices.
  • exports

Exempt Goods and Ser­vices (you pay 7% HST)

  • imports of zero-rated goods (goods that are specif­i­cally taxed at zero per cent in Canada, such as pre­scrip­tion drugs)
  • goods imported by a char­ity or pub­lic insti­tu­tion that have been donated to the char­ity or institution
  • used res­i­den­tial housing
  • long-term res­i­den­tial accom­mo­da­tion (of one month or more), and res­i­den­tial con­do­minium fees
  • some sales of vacant land or farmland
  • most health, med­ical, and den­tal ser­vices per­formed by licensed physi­cians or den­tists for med­ical reasons
  • child-care ser­vices (day-care ser­vices for less than 24 hours a day) for chil­dren 14 years old and younger
  • personal-care ser­vices for chil­dren, under­priv­i­leged indi­vid­u­als, or indi­vid­u­als with dis­abil­i­ties, when pro­vided by a per­son oper­at­ing an estab­lish­ment for these indi­vid­u­als, in either insti­tu­tional or non-institutional settings
  • bridge, road, and ferry tolls (ferry tolls are taxed at zero per cent if the ferry ser­vice is to or from a place out­side Canada)
  • legal aid services
  • many edu­ca­tional ser­vices, such as courses from a voca­tional school that lead to a cer­tifi­cate or a diploma to prac­tise a trade or a voca­tion; or tutor­ing ser­vices for an indi­vid­ual who takes a course approved for credit by a school author­ity or the edu­ca­tion ser­vice fol­lows a cur­ricu­lum des­ig­nated by a school authority
  • music lessons
  • most food or bev­er­ages sold in an ele­men­tary or sec­ondary school cafe­te­ria pri­mar­ily to stu­dents of the school and most meal plans pro­vided in a uni­ver­sity or pub­lic college
  • most ser­vices pro­vided by finan­cial insti­tu­tions such as arrange­ments for a loan or mortgage
  • arrang­ing for and issu­ing insur­ance poli­cies by insur­ance com­pa­nies, agents, and brokers
  • cer­tain goods and ser­vices pro­vided by non-profit orga­ni­za­tions, gov­ern­ments, and other pub­lic ser­vice bod­ies, such as munic­i­pal tran­sit ser­vices and stan­dard res­i­den­tial ser­vices such as water distribution
  • most goods and ser­vices pro­vided by charities.

NDP Cellphone Freedom Act

The Apple iPhone was orig­i­nally offered exclu­sively in Canada by Rogers. The rea­son behind it was because the iPhone is a GSM phone while Telus and Bell were on CDMA — a dif­fer­ent com­mu­ni­ca­tion tech­nol­ogy. After Telus and Bell switched over to GSM and offered HPSA wire­less, the iPhone came to Bell and Telus — as well as their chil­dren companies.

If you buy a phone from any cell­phone car­rier in Canada, your phone will be locked to that car­rier unless you unlock it. If you buy a Black­berry from Rogers, you can­not use it on Fido unless you hire a per­son, most likely a 15 to 25 year old Chi­nese per­son, to unlock it for you. This will usu­ally cost you any­where from $5 to $15.

The rea­son why car­ri­ers lock their phone are usu­ally to monop­o­lize you from going to another car­rier. It is a way of bring­ing the cost down, because they know they will most likely col­lect 3 years worth of bills from you.

NDP MP Bruce Hyer is tabling an act called “Cell Phone Free­dom Act.” The pur­pose of this act is to “empower con­sumers to move more eas­ily between com­pa­nies and would force wire­less providers to com­pete more aggres­sively on price and ser­vices to lure con­sumers, ben­e­fit­ing con­sumers and mak­ing the indus­try more competitive.”

If this bill passes, it will force car­ri­ers to sell the phone unlocked — allow­ing you to switch from com­pany to com­pany. It will most likely bring up the price of the phone, because the risk of you switch­ing will increase.

In Que­bec, a new law will be com­ing into effect that reduces the ter­mi­na­tion fees that providers charge for the con­sumer who wants to nul­lify the agree­ment. Rogers have pre­vi­ously announced that they will raise the price of phones in the province, to off­set the risk.

I have been with Rogers for sev­eral years. I get a new phone at least once every year, if not every two years. I do not switch from car­ri­ers to car­ri­ers due to price, as my bill is already the low­est that it can be. The only effect that it would have on me is that the price that I pay for phones will increase.

Adden­dum:

Car­ri­ers offer carrier-specific phones. Bell and Telus offers the Tour while Rogers does not. If this bill passes, you will be able to use the Tour on Rogers just by plug­ging in your Rogers SIM card at the store!

Canada Day 2010!

Canada Day is just half a month away! July 1st marks the 143rd anniver­sary of the found­ing of Canada.

There are many adven­tures on the day for indi­vid­u­als and fam­i­lies! Below is a list of what you can do!

Con­tinue read­ing ‘Canada Day 2010!’

SFU Senate By-Elections Info

Ear­lier this year, we had nom­i­na­tions and elec­tions for SFU Sen­ate Stu­dent Rep­re­sen­ta­tives. We are hav­ing a by-election for Fac­ulty of Applied Sci­ence, Fac­ulty of Sci­ence, and Fac­ulty of Envi­ron­ment. On June 7 to June 9, stu­dents of the fac­ul­ties of Applied Sci­ence and Sci­ence will be head­ing to the polls to vote for their rep­re­sen­ta­tive. No nom­i­na­tions were received for the Fac­ulty of Envi­ron­ment so they will remain vacant.

Con­tinue read­ing ‘SFU Sen­ate By-Elections Info’

iTax

Cana­dian Her­itage Min­is­ter James Moore calls this tax the “iTax”. This tax is pro­posed by New Demo­c­rat Party MP Char­lie Angus. The pro­posed tax will add a tax to any device that is capa­ble of play­ing audio — iPod, iPhone, iPad, iRiver, Walk­mans, Android, Black­ber­rys, Note­book Com­put­ers, Desk­top Com­put­ers and basi­cally any­thing you can find at your local Best Buy store.

Con­tinue read­ing ‘iTax’