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Federal budget moves ahead with new tax on big bank and insurer profits

Ottawa is raising taxes on Canada's biggest banks and insurance companies in a move that could bring in as much as $6 billion in new revenue.

1-time fee will be levied on 2021 profit, along with slightly higher rate moving forward

Canada's top banking regulator has raised capital ratios for Canada's big banks.
Ottawa is moving ahead with its rumoured plans to tax high profits at Canada's big banks. (Brent Lewin/Bloomberg)

Ottawa is raising taxes on Canada's biggest banks and insurance companies.

The government says the county's major financial institutions made significant profits during the pandemic and have recovered faster than other parts of the economy, largely thanks to government support programs.

"The federal government is accordingly proposing two measures to ensure those large financial institutions help support Canada's broader recovery," according to budget documents.

The federal budget wastabled Thursday in the House of Commons.

The main part of what the government is calling a "Canada Recovery Dividend" consists of a one-time tax of 15 per cent ontheir profits over $1 billion, for the 2021 tax year. That move is expected to bring in about $4 billion.

A second change will see the government inch up the corporate tax rate for banks and insurers on their profits over $100 million to 16.5 per cent, from 15 per cent previously. That move is expected to bring in $445 million annually to government coffers. Over the five years of the budget forecast, that brings the total of the bank tax changes to more than $6 billion.

WATCH | Finance minister tables federal budget:

Freeland delivers Budget 2022 speech

2 years ago
Duration 30:33
Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland delivers Budget 2022 speech in the House of Commons.

The idea had been floated on the campaign trail last year, and those in the investment community expressed their opposition to any sort of plan to punish one sector of the economic for being profitable.

Scotiabank CEO Brian Porter railed against the idea of such a tax in his prepared remarks at the bank's annual general meeting this week, calling the plan "a knee-jerk reaction that sends the wrong message to the global investment community."