My perspective - Ready or not

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By Kate Jackman-Atkinson

Neepawa Banner & Press

Over the next decade, it’s estimated that about $1.5 trillion worth of business assets will change hands in Canada. The success or failure of this transfer will have a huge impact on Canada’s economy and I’m not convinced we’ve done all we can to prepare.

We knew the day would come when Canada’s ageing baby boomer entrepreneurs would look towards transitioning out of their businesses and towards retirement. According to data from 2014, about half of both small and medium sized business owners were between 50 and 64 years of age. When you add the 12 per cent of small business owners and 14 per cent of medium business owners who are over 65 years of age, it’s easy to see why 72 per cent of Canadian business owners plan to exit their companies in the next decade.

Small businesses are extremely important to the Canadian economy. According to data from Innovation, Science and Economic Development Canada, the country is home to over 1 million small businesses– companies that have fewer than 100 employees. Across Canada, 7.7 million people, or almost 70 per cent of private sector workers, are employed by small businesses. These companies aren’t just important for existing jobs, between 2002 and 2014, small businesses created about 100,000 jobs each year, or close to 78 per cent of all private sector jobs created in that time period.

When it comes to timelines, Canadian Federation of Independent Business (CFIB) data indicates that 8 per cent of business owners looking to exit plan to do so in the next year. The majority, 39 per cent, plan to exit their business in one to five years. But who will take these businesses over? About half of business owners surveyed by CFIB plan to sell their business, with about half of those planning to sell to a family member. About 21 per cent plan to pass their business to family through an inheritance. More troublingly for the Canadian economy though, about 15 per cent plan to just wind down their business, usually because they have no successor or buyer.

The pool of potential buyers is limited, more so than it should be. Entrepreneurship isn’t a bad word, but it’s one we seldom see pushed as a first choice for one’s career. At the high school and post secondary levels, kids are encouraged to get a job, not make jobs. The end result of decades of this mentality is a narrow pool of Canadians who are actively considering entrepreneurship as a career and not just something they fall into. Our failure to prepare the next generation of entrepreneurs is likely to have huge ramifications over the next decade.

Despite how important the transfer of these businesses is to the economy, successive federal governments haven’t worked to remedy some of the obstacles that make it harder for these transitions to take place. One of the biggest problems is how the Canada Revenue Agency views the transfer of business assets between family members. While this is the preferred outcome for many business owners, it comes with a financial penalty. Currently, for such transfers, the difference between the sale price and the original investment is taxed as a dividend. However, when a business is sold to a third party, the difference is treated as a capital gain, which results in a lower tax bill thanks to the lifetime capital gains exemption.

Ensuring the continued operation of existing firms is important, as only half of new businesses survive past their fifth year of operation. Solving this problem shouldn’t just fall to entrepreneurs looking to sell– from retirees’ disposable income, to preserving Canadian jobs, to ensuring vibrant rural communities, a lot is riding on the successful transition of these businesses over the next decade.