Quebec tax hike targets miners as slump hits industry – by RHÉAL SÉGUIN, SOPHIE COUSINEAU (Globe and Mail – ay 7, 2013)

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QUEBEC, MONTREAL – The Quebec government is boosting its take from a mining sector already beset by a global downturn, introducing minimum royalty payments and other tax increases aimed at generating up to $200-million a year.

Those increases are less than what the Parti Québécois promised during last’s year’s election campaign – an acknowledgment, the government said, that the drop in commodity prices meant it had to scale down its plans for increasing revenue from the sector.

The new taxes are in addition to existing federal and Quebec general corporate taxes.

According to the Quebec government, at least 10 mining companies didn’t pay any taxes to the province in 2011. The proposed changes, to take effect in 2014, take aim at those firms, requiring that any mining operation pay the higher of two fees: either a royalty on production (with a 1-per-cent tax on the first $80-million on the value of the mineral output, increasing to 4 per cent after that point) or a graduated tax based on a firm’s profit margin (starting at 16 per cent and rising to a top rate of 28 per cent).

Quebec Finance Minister Nicolas Marceau estimated that, depending on mining activity and profits, the new regime will increase government revenues between $73-million and $200-million a year in 2015. Mr. Marceau said that over the next 12 years, the province could increase cumulative revenues up to $1.8-billion.

The amount falls well short of the average $388-million a year over five years the PQ promised to extract from mining companies.

Mr. Marceau said a 25-per cent decrease in metal prices since 2011 forced the government to revise its strategy. “There are less profitable mining companies right now…I never accepted the logic of a fixed amount Mr. Marceau said. “The context has changed. It would have been irresponsible to achieve the figure [of $388-million per year].”

Mr. Marceau said that over a 12-year period, the province could increase revenues up to a maximum of $1.8-billion, which will go to paying down the province’s debt.

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