The Canadian Automotive Partnership Council (CAPC) has called for tax incentives
in order to encourage greater investment in the industry by international vehicle
and parts manufacturers.
According to a report in the Globe and Mail on Tuesday, the investment and
fiscal committee of the industry group put forward several proposals, including
the elimination of the large corporations tax and the capital tax, the creation
of a 20% tax credit for spending on new machinery and equipment, and the provision
of credits for automotive research and development (R&D) activities.
The CAPC also called for tax credits for companies within the automobile industry
which retrofit their places of manufacture in order to meet the federal government's
requirements under the Kyoto Treaty, for example by switching from hydraulic
to electric robots in order to reduce carbon dioxide emissions.
However, the Globe and Mail observed that: 'It's not clear how much it would
cost the federal government to make all the changes suggested. The large corporations
tax alone provides Ottowa with about $1.3 billion in revenue annually.'
The CAPC was established earlier this year by Canadian Industry Ministry, Allan
Rock, and comprises the heads of the five automobile manufacturers with operations
in Canada, CEOs from several parts making companies, Ontario Enterprise Minister,
Jim Flaherty, and Quebec Finance Minister, Pauline Marois.