OTTAWA: I am a lifelong entrepreneur, small business owner, and investor. Not once in my 40-year career of making my own way have I ever complained about the Canadian tax system. I have always felt that it was such a privilege to live in this great country that I was more than happy to pay an outsized share of the cost to run it. We have always looked after our own here, and believing in that approach has made paying more than 50 cents on a dollar earned acceptable to me. While unfair on the surface, 10 percent of the country’s population paying 54 percent of the total income tax was reasonable to me. One benefit of being around for a while is that time and being exposed to constant change gives one perspective. My father, a small business entrepreneur, arrived in this country with a mere $60 in his pocket and only a grade 8 education. Nevertheless, he went on to build a very successful business that employed many Canadians and expanded our country’s tax base. Sadly, that business was nearly lost in the early 80s when interest rates shot up to 24 percent. Those incredibly tough times when my family nearly lost everything did not lessen my father’s passion for business, nor his desire to be a difference maker. He believed (and still does) that prudent risk-taking is what drives our economy forward. He found a way to back me and three buddies in an early-stage company that eventually evolved into Lavalife. It was sold in 2004 to a US company for $180 million. My father’s risk-taking, combined with our seven-day-a-week hard work, created a huge Canadian success story and a windfall for Revenue Canada.
The most important part of that story is what we, the founders, did with most of the after-tax proceeds of the sale. We invested in other Canadian entrepreneurs. This story is not unique. There are well over one million small businesses in Canada, the majority of which were started from scratch. Small businesses provide over 8 million jobs to our economy, representing over 70 percent of all private-sector employment. The owners of these businesses do not have the backstop of severance, do not have defined-benefit pensions, and do not have generous benefits packages. Yet, they drive us forward by creating jobs and bringing innovative products and services into our lives. Small business is the lifeblood of the Canadian economy and — excuse my language — it’s fucking hard work. The technology industry is now going through a particularly interesting time, one full of opportunity. We are producing second and third-time entrepreneurs that have exited businesses and are reinvesting both with their time and their money. We have the best engineers in the world, as the multinationals setting up shop here will attest. The venture capital is starting to flow here, and we have the benefit of a US president creating an environment of disharmony to the south. Canada has never been in a better position to capitalize on my long-held belief that our tech entrepreneurs can hold their own with anyone in the world.
Our government has been right there talking up our growing companies, contributing money to venture, and encouraging innovation. All this while maintaining commitments to fighting climate change, fighting for the rights of Indigenous people, and generally making us proud on the world stage. What a great country we live in, and what a fantastic time to start a business. This is our time! I have said that over and over again on The Disruptors and wherever I’ve had an audience. I feel it and so do many others. Ah, but not so fast. Despite being on track for record tax collection, it appears that our well-intentioned government doesn’t really understand what every small business owner intuitively knows (or is forced to learn quickly): you shouldn’t consistently spend more than you bring in. If you do that in business, you will go broke unless you can find another source of capital. Unfortunately for us, our government thinks it has found its own new source: private small and medium-sized businesses. The marketing plan is simple: have the wealthiest among us pay a little more so that those who need it most can benefit.