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Financial reporting and accounting advisory services
You trust your external auditor to deliver not only a high-quality, independent audit of your financial statements but to provide a range of support, including assessing material risks, evaluating internal controls and raising awareness around new and amended accounting standards.
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Accounting Standards for Private Enterprises
Get the clear financial picture you need with the accounting standards team at Doane Grant Thornton LLP. Our experts have extensive experience with private enterprises of all sizes in all industries, an in-depth knowledge of today’s accounting standards, and are directly involved in the standard-setting process.
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International Financial Reporting Standards
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Accounting Standards for Not-for-Profit Organizations
From small, community organizations to large, national charities, you can count on Doane Grant Thornton LLP’s accounting standards team for in-depth knowledge and trusted advice.
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Working for a public-sector organization comes with a unique set of requirements for accounting and financial reporting. Doane Grant Thornton LLP’s accounting standards team has the practical, public-sector experience and in-depth knowledge you need.
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Tax planning and compliance
Whether you are a private or public organization, your goal is to manage the critical aspects of tax compliance, and achieve the most effective results. At Doane Grant Thornton, we focus on delivering relevant advice, and providing an integrated planning approach to help you fulfill compliance obligations.
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Research and development and government incentives
Are you developing innovative processes or products, undertaking experimentation or solving technological problems? If so, you may qualify to claim SR&ED tax credits. This Canadian federal government initiative is designed to encourage and support innovation in Canada. Our R&D professionals are a highly-trained, diverse team of practitioners that are engineers, scientists and specialized accountants.
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Indirect tax
Keeping track of changes and developments in GST/HST, Quebec sales tax and other provincial sales taxes across Canada, can be a full-time job. The consequences for failing to adequately manage your organization’s sales tax obligations can be significant - from assessments, to forgone recoveries and cash flow implications, to customer or reputational risk.
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US corporate tax
The United States has a very complex and regulated tax environment, that may undergo significant changes. Cross-border tax issues could become even more challenging for Canadian businesses looking for growth and prosperity in the biggest economy in the world.
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Cross-border personal tax
In an increasingly flexible world, moving across the border may be more viable for Canadians and Americans; however, relocating may also have complex tax implications.
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International tax
While there is great opportunity for businesses looking to expand globally, organizations are under increasing tax scrutiny. Regardless of your company’s size and level of international involvement—whether you’re working abroad, investing, buying and selling, borrowing or manufacturing—doing business beyond Canada’s borders comes with its fair share of tax risks.
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Transfer pricing
Transfer pricing is a complex area of corporate taxation that is concerned with the intra-group pricing of goods, services, intangibles, and financial instruments. Transfer pricing has become a critical governance issue for companies, tax authorities and policy makers, and represents a principal risk area for multinationals.
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Succession & estate planning
Like many private business owners today, you’ve spent your career building and running your business successfully. Now you’re faced with deciding on a successor—a successor who may or may not want your direct involvement and share your vision.
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Tax Reporting & Advisory
The financial and tax reporting obligations of public markets and global tax authorities take significant resources and investment to manage. This requires calculating global tax provision estimates under US GAAP, IFRS, and other frameworks, and reconciling this reporting with tax compliance obligations.
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Transactions
Our transactions group takes a client-centric, integrated approach, focused on helping you make and implement the best financial strategies. We offer meaningful, actionable and holistic advice to allow you to create value, manage risks and seize opportunities. It’s what we do best: help great organizations like yours grow and thrive.
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Restructuring
We bring a wide range of services to both individuals and businesses – including shareholders, executives, directors, lenders, creditors and other advisors who are dealing with a corporation experiencing financial challenges.
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Forensics
Market-driven expertise in investigation, dispute resolution and digital forensics
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Consulting
Running a business is challenging and you need advice you can rely on at anytime you need it. Our team dives deep into your issues, looking holistically at your organization to understand your people, processes, and systems needs at the root of your pain points. The intersection of these three things is critical to develop the solutions you need today.
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Creditor updates
Updates for creditors, limited partners, investors and shareholders.
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Governance, risk and compliance
Effective, risk management—including governance and regulatory compliance—can lead to tangible, long-term business improvements. And be a source of significant competitive advantage.
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Internal audit
Organizations thrive when they are constantly innovating, improving or creating new services and products and envisioning new markets and growth opportunities.
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Certification – SOX
The corporate governance landscape is challenging at the best of times for public companies and their subsidiaries in Canada, the United States and around the world.
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Third party assurance
Naturally, clients and stakeholders want reassurance that there are appropriate controls and safeguards over the data and processes being used to service their business. It’s critical.
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ASPE Sec. 3041 Agriculture Understanding and applying the new ASPE Section 3041 AgricultureThe Canadian Accounting Standards Board (AcSB) has released new guidance on recognizing, measuring and disclosing biological assets and the harvested products of bio assets.
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Tax alert Agricultural Clean Technology ProgramThe Agricultural Clean Technology Program will provide financial assistance to farmers and agri-businesses to help them reduce greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions.
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Tax alert ACT Program – Research and Innovation Stream explainedThe ACT Research and Innovation Stream provides financial support to organizations engaged in pre-market innovation.
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Tax alert ACT Program – Adoption Stream explainedThe ACT Adoption Stream provides non-repayable funding to help farmers and agri-business with the purchase and installation of clean technologies.
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Builders And Developers
Every real estate project starts with a vision. We help builders and developers solidify that vision, transform it into reality, and create value.
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Rental Property Owners And Occupiers
In today’s economic climate, it’s more important than ever to have a strong advisory partner on your side.
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Real Estate Service Providers
Your company plays a key role in the success of landlords, investors and owners, but who is doing the same for you?
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Mining
There’s no business quite like mining. It’s volatile, risky and complex – but the potential pay-off is huge. You’re not afraid of a challenge: the key is finding the right balance between risk and reward. Whether you’re a junior prospector, a senior producer, or somewhere in between, we’ll work with you to explore, discover and extract value at every stage of the mining process.
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Oil & gas
The oil and gas industry is facing many complex challenges, beyond the price of oil. These include environmental issues, access to markets, growing competition from alternative energy sources and international markets, and a rapidly changing regulatory landscape, to name but a few.
In recent posts, we looked at some of the changes proposed by the Department of Finance to end “unfair tax advantages” for privately held Canadian businesses. There are potentially serious unforeseen consequences and to help illustrate this point of view, we’ve put together a few examples.
Retirement
You’re a business owner relying on the passive investment assets you’ve accumulated inside your company to fund your retirement. The profit you have retained in the company has been taxed at the appropriate corporate tax rate. Since using those lower rates to accumulate capital has been part of your long-term retirement plans, you may not have contributed to the Canada Pension Plan (CPP) or any Registered Retirement Savings Plans (RRSP). Furthermore, you don’t have a funded pension plan available to you.
In other words, you are completely on your own relative to providing for your retirement. Many public and private sector employees have partially or fully funded pensions so the ability to save for retirement inside your corporation is crucial to allow you to build a comparable income stream in retirement. Under the proposed rules, you could face higher taxes to accumulate and remove those assets from your company. As a result, you may have less money available for retirement than you thought.
If the goal here is to tax business owners more like employees, it ignores the model of owner risk/reward and the fact that owners frequently have no retirement funds other than what they’ve earned and saved. Compare this to the significant value of many employer-funded pension plans and the need to retain assets inside a company becomes clear.
Gender impact
A female business owner took time off from her business to have a baby—and, because there’s no maternity leave for the self-employed, she promptly returned on a part-time basis. While she was able to keep her business up and running as she raised a young family, this decision still came with a financial penalty in that it forced her to delay repaying her student debt and saving for her future.
While men can find themselves in this scenario too, women are disproportionately affected by such family sacrifices. Tax policies that reduce a business owner’s ability to split income within their family and potentially reduce the ability to retain profit within a corporation simply adds even greater challenges. This seems to contradict, from a policy perspective, the government’s stated commitment to gender equality.
Business success is a family affair
Typically, private businesses are started and capitalized using family assets, and then run by family members. In some cases, one spouse or common-law may stay home to manage the family to allow the other to focus on the business. Furthermore, when the business needs to take on debt to buy equipment, inventory or facilities, that debt is often personally guaranteed by the business owners.
If the business falls on hard times and fails, the entire family is impacted when their home and livelihood is at stake. Both partners in the relationship often become shareholders, and the children may too, either directly or indirectly. Such an arrangement currently allows the eventual rewards of the business—often after many years of hard work and sacrifice—to be split among the family via dividends or the use of the capital gains exemption, with each member taxed according to their individual tax bracket.
But while the entire family has contributed to the success of the business, whether by directly working within business operations, taking time to raise the family, using family assets to capitalize the business or taking on economic risk, new government proposals will assess whether dividends paid or capital gains claimed are “reasonable” based on the individual’s contribution to the business.
This does not fully contemplate the true contribution of the family unit—which will clearly impact the overall family unit’s after-tax cash on hand. When a marriage fails, spouses split family assets; but when a business succeeds due to family sacrifice, their mutual contributions will no longer be recognized.
Business succession
The family business is an integral component of our communities. These businesses invest in employment and economic growth in every part of our country—from small towns to large cities. Because of this, the succession of family businesses is something we have always celebrated and encouraged in Canada.
In many cases, the current owner will want to pass the business onto his or her children or others close to the family—not only as a point of pride, but to maintain the value built up over time within the family and the community in which the business operates. Currently, this can be done by having the business owner sell the company to their family recognizing a capital gain. This can also happen when a business owner dies and the estate is subject to tax on the resulting deemed capital gain before passing the business on to the family.
Under the new proposals, however, a sale to a family member or passing the company to family on death would be effectively taxed at a much higher dividend rate. Only by selling to a third party—which takes the business out of the family and often severs long-held community connections—can the owner realize a capital gain and shelter some of that gain through the capital gains exemption. What does this mean? It’s better, from a tax perspective under the proposals, to sell your business to a foreign public company than it would be to your own family.
Similarly, when a business owner dies owning a private corporation their estate will need to decide whether the substantial additional tax cost under the proposed new rules is worth keeping the business in the family. In all likelihood, the estate may decide to sell the business, which may result in less tax, to retain as much of the value as possible. This outcome is simply inconsistent with a nation whose economy and communities are built on family-owned private businesses.
Entrepreneurial spirit
The Canadian economy is built on entrepreneurial spirit. Each time an entrepreneur makes a business decision they also take on significant personal risk. Many businesses, even established ones, will fail for a number of reasons. When this happens, the business owner and their family, can lose everything. In addition to not being eligible to collect employment insurance, these owners also stand to lose the personal assets they used to fund business operations and personally-guaranteed business debts.
Despite all of this, entrepreneurs take the leap to build a business because of their passion and commitment to their ideas and the hope of economic rewards that may follow. By taking away a business owner’s ability to effectively manage their tax burden and build assets for retirement, the reward side of the equation is reduced—and the entrepreneurial spirit is placed at risk.
The government’s clear lack of understanding regarding the significant differences between an entrepreneur and an employee is a serious concern. Not only does it jeopardize the very culture of innovation and willingness to take risk to build a better economy, but it also discourages investment in capital and employment.
There’s a reason owning a business isn’t for everyone—because it doesn’t come with a safety net. If the government wants to keep our country’s economic engine humming, it must find ways to alleviate some of the risk facing our country’s private businesses—and help them effectively build safety nets for themselves. The government can start by taking a closer look at its proposed rules—and their consequences.