Dr.Guru of Peru
played the long game
Sorry, I don't have a response to this. It's an opinion, and your'e entitled to it, but there's nothing to retort.There are lots of benefits from incorporating. A lower tax rate should not be one. (As Andrew Coyne said)
Except both your wife and plumber are able to set their own fees and bill whoever they want. Physicians exclusively bill their provincial insurance companies at the rates set by the province. Other public health systems (such as the NHS) have responded to this by creating a physicians pension plan that the government pays into. The Canadian solution is to allow tax deferral and passive investments through incorporation, as their really is no appetite to create a pension plan for another sector of public workers.I pay my plumber directly. That doesn't mean I need be involved in his benefit package or retirement fund. My wife's clients who pay her aren't involved in our financial planning. Everyone gets money from somewhere and has outside forces determine what their services are worth.
It's not just medical corporations that are getting brought in line, it's any small corporation. This affects me too but just because I benefit from a tax loophole doesn't mean said loophole is a good thing that ought to exist.
Well yes, that's my point I made in the first part of my last point. This "loophole" isn't exclusive to physicians. For full disclosure: I am a physician who is not incorporated.