Moving to Canada for Lower Taxes
In a recent op-ed, it was noted that Canadaâs industrial heartland of Ontario is cutting its federal-provincial corporate tax rate to 25%, or 15 percentage points lower than the average U.S. federal-state rate of 40%.
Marginal tax rates affect economic behavior. Thus I was not surprised when I read in a Mark Steyn column that retailer Tim Hortons (essentially Canadaâs Starbucks) is packing up its U.S. headquarters and moving to Ontario. The company operates 3,457 retail outlets on both sides of the border.
http://www.cato-at-liberty.org/2009/07/06/moving-to-canada-for-lower-taxes/
In a recent op-ed, it was noted that Canadaâs industrial heartland of Ontario is cutting its federal-provincial corporate tax rate to 25%, or 15 percentage points lower than the average U.S. federal-state rate of 40%.
Marginal tax rates affect economic behavior. Thus I was not surprised when I read in a Mark Steyn column that retailer Tim Hortons (essentially Canadaâs Starbucks) is packing up its U.S. headquarters and moving to Ontario. The company operates 3,457 retail outlets on both sides of the border.
http://www.cato-at-liberty.org/2009/07/06/moving-to-canada-for-lower-taxes/

