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www.cfib.ca Challenges and Opportunities for Small Business in Nova Scotia Pre-Budget Meeting with the Honourable Diana Whalen, Minister of Finance Corinne Pohlmann, Senior Vice President, National Affairs Jennifer English, Senior Policy Analyst, Nova Scotia February 12, 2014
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www.cfib.ca About CFIB Mandate: Big voice for small business Promote and protect Canada’s free- enterprise economy Result of tax protest over 43 years ago 109,000 members with over 5,200 in Nova Scotia Non-partisan; 100% member funded One member, one vote policy
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www.cfib.ca State of Nova Scotia’s Economy Canada64.0 Newfoundland & Labrador 68.1 Prince Edward Island 58.8 Nova Scotia58.1 New Brunswick56.6 Quebec56.2 Ontario65.4 Manitoba62.2 Saskatchewan63.7 Alberta67.1 British Columbia71.8 CFIB January Business Barometer Index of 50 = equal balance of stronger and weaker business expectations Source: CFIB, Business Barometer Index, January 2014
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www.cfib.ca Main cost pressures Fuel and energy costs (51%) Tax and regulatory costs (49%) Bank account and processing fees (39%) Main operating pressures Insufficient domestic demand (43%) Management skills, time constraints (22%) Shortage of skilled labour (19%)
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www.cfib.ca Do you support the planned introduction of a new statutory holiday in Nova Scotia? (% response) Source: CFIB, Nova Scotia Statutory Holiday Survey, January 2014, n= 474
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www.cfib.ca How confident are you that your provincial government has a vision that supports small business? Source: CFIB, Provincial/Territorial Entrepreneurial Vision Survey, August 2013, n=7155 (NS=279) (% response)
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www.cfib.ca How likely would you be to recommend starting a business in your province? (% response) Source: CFIB, Provincial/Territorial Entrepreneurial Vision Survey, August 2013, n=7155 (NS=279)
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www.cfib.ca Nova Scotia’s Uncompetitive Tax Environment – Personal Income Tax Source: CFIB, Shameful Tax Facts, February 2014
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www.cfib.ca Nova Scotia’s Uncompetitive Tax Environment – Sales Tax Source: CFIB, Shameful Tax Facts, February 2014
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www.cfib.ca What should your provincial government focus on to help your business thrive? (% response) Source: CFIB, Provincial/Territorial Entrepreneurial Vision Survey, August 2013, n=279)
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www.cfib.ca How government can help small business thrive – Advice from members Realize that small business is the cornerstone to the success of the economy and place more consideration in helping these businesses rather than making it harder to succeed. I'd like it if we didn't have to compete against the government when it comes to wages and benefits. We have lost several employees over the past year who left us to work for the government. We can't match what the government pays in hourly wages! Reduce the tax burden, and start thinking broadly about the Maritimes or Atlantic provinces to leverage our collective strengths rather than competing amongst ourselves. We hope you will keep working with CFIB and keep educating yourself on small business. It is the mainstay of our economy.
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www.cfib.ca Fiscal Recommendations: Eliminate Bracket Creep Source: CFIB, Bracket Creep Backgrounder, January 2014
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www.cfib.ca Fiscal Recommendations: Increase SBTR threshold to $400,000 Current $350,000 threshold is lowest in Canada Standard across Canada is $500,000 – only Manitoba still remains at $400,000 Increase to $400,000 with plan to move toward $500,000 over time
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www.cfib.ca Red Tape Reduction Red Tape Awareness Week Announcements Growler sales from brewpubs Restaurant and Accommodations Industry Sector Bundle Project What’s next? Measure burden Report publicly Legislate commitment
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www.cfib.ca Pension Reform: Eliminate the Bridge Benefit Nova Scotia members of the Public Service Superannuation Plan can retire as early as 55. Plan members are eligible for a ‘top up’ until age 65 when full CPP benefits kick in. In Nova Scotia, the average ‘top up’ (i.e. bridge benefit) is $8,154 a year. Source: CFIB, The Case for Ending Early Retirement in the Public Sector, June 2013
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www.cfib.ca Pension Reform: Introduce PRPPs Do not support mandatory increases to CPP Introduce Pooled Registered Pension Plans (PRPPs) – voluntary enrolment Fully disclose public sector pension plan liabilities annually Convert vulnerable pension plans to Shared Risk Model Should CPP premiums be increased to expand benefits? Source: CFIB Mandate Survey, March-April 2013, n=9,977
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www.cfib.ca Recommendations: Fiscal Set target to achieve balanced budget Develop long-term plan to reduce the total tax burden Eliminate bracket creep Increase Small Business Tax Rate Threshold back to $400,000
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www.cfib.ca Recommendations: Red Tape Measure, report and reduce overall regulatory burden Include measurement in budget document Legislate commitment to red tape reduction
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www.cfib.ca Recommendations: Pension Reform Eliminate the bridge benefit Do not support mandatory increases to CPP Introduce PRPPs Publicly disclose public sector pension liabilities annually Convert vulnerable pension plans to Shared Risk Model
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