Owners of Vancouver's most expensive homes pay very little tax, UBC study finds
A new study from the University of British Columbia has found owners of the most expensive properties in Vancouver are paying very little income tax.
Researchers found the top five per cent of homes as of 2018 had a median value of $3.7 million, but the median income tax paid by the homeowners was $15,800 – 0.42 per cent of their home’s value.
In contrast, owners of Vancouver homes with a median value of $984,000 – less than a quarter of the top tier – paid $12,500 in income tax, which is 1.37 per cent of their home’s value.
Study co-author Thomas Davidoff, an associate professor in UBC’s Sauder School of Business, called the findings “outrageous.”
“There are lots of people who pay a ton of income tax who own expensive homes, but there's too many people who are clearly affluent who don't contribute much to taxation in British Columbia and that's a failure of the progressivity of our taxes," said Davidoff.
He said it’s possible some owners are not paying as much income tax because they may have inherited the wealth, or they’ve brought money from overseas.
He suggests the city should implement a minimum income tax based on property value to level the playing field.
"What we've proposed is people have to pay an income tax of one per cent of their property value," Davidoff said.
"I think it's a pretty widely held belief that people with the greatest ability to pay should be those who pay the most taxes. There's people who disagree with that. There are people who think, ‘No, your ability to pay should be unrelated to how much tax you pay.' But generally in Canada, we seem to, based on income taxation, believe in progressive taxation.”
He hopes an equal tax for all will help fix what he describes as a weak relationship between income tax and property value in the city.
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
W5 Investigates | How did a healthy teen die at a minor hockey camp?
The parents of young Ontario hockey player Ben Teague have been searching for answers since he died while at a team retreat in 2019. The mystery about what happened and the code of silence in hockey culture is explored in CTV W5's 'What Happened to Ben,' on CTVNews.ca and W5's official YouTube channel.

Donald Trump's call for protests gets muted reaction by supporters
Former U.S. President Donald Trump's calls for protests ahead of his anticipated indictment in New York have generated mostly muted reactions from supporters, with even some of his most ardent loyalists dismissing the idea as a waste of time or a law enforcement trap.
Conservatives forcing MPs to vote on striking new foreign interference study
In an effort to keep the foreign interference story at the forefront, and to do an apparent endrun around the Liberal filibuster blocking one study from going ahead, Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre is forcing MPs to debate and then vote on a motion instructing an opposition-dominated House committee to strike its own review.
6 missing after Old Montreal fire 'probably still in the rubble': Police
Officials are still looking for victims after a fire ripped through a building in Old Montreal last week, killing at least one person. At a press conference Monday morning, spokespersons for the Montreal police and Montreal fire department said six people are still missing. They come from various locations in Quebec, Ontario and the U.S.
opinion | Biden's Canada visit is long overdue and so are the issues facing the North American neighbours: expert
Questions abound as to why U.S. President Biden is only now making the visit to Canada, more than two years into his presidency.
Woman suing Tim Hortons for $500K after hot tea spill left her 'disfigured'
An Ontario woman has launched a lawsuit seeking $500,000 from Tim Hortons after she suffered major burns from an alleged ‘superheated’ tea. The company has denied all allegations and said she was ‘the author of her own misfortune.'
China's Xi meeting Putin in boost for isolated Russia leader
Chinese leader Xi Jinping is due to meet with Vladimir Putin in a political boost for the isolated Russian president after the International Criminal Court charged him with war crimes in Ukraine.
Air passenger complaints triple in one year to pass 42,000 as backlog grows
The number of air passenger complaints to Canada's transport regulator is soaring, more than tripling to 42,000 over the past year.
Trails of human bacteria from sneezing and coughing preserved on Mount Everest: study
Even at one of the tallest natural peaks on Earth, humans have left their mark in a trail of bacteria as researchers have found germs from coughing and sneezing that have been potentially preserved for centuries on Mount Everest.