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Five companies waiting in the FP 500 wings that are worth watching
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The Next 50: Canada has plenty of budding innovative companies It s time to turn them into trees
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It s time for Trudeau to put on his agri-jacket at the G7 and EU summits Special to Financial Post © Provided by Financial Post Canada s agriculture and agri-food exports are on an upwards trajectory, fueling growth and economic activity across rural and urban communities, Dan Darling writes. If you’re a certain vintage, you know the excitement of putting on a jacket you haven’t worn in a while and finding a crisp $20-bill in the pocket. Money you had all along becomes found money – and it’s a good feeling. Now imagine that, rather than $20, you find Canada’s agriculture and agri-food trade industry and billions of dollars of economic activity.
The Innovation Imperative: Why Canada needs to think local to break out of its low-innovation equilibrium
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Opinion: Canada should allow joint tax filing for spouses Special to Financial Post © Provided by Financial Post Canada still taxes individuals, while other countries have moved to taxing family income or combined spousal income. Since the advent of the personal income tax in 1917, Canada has taxed individuals. Each Canadian resident files a tax return and pays tax computed on a progressive rate schedule the higher the income, the higher the marginal rate. Neither spousal status nor combined family income matters: each individual is taxed separately. This can lead to unequal treatment of families, depending on how their household income is earned. For example, a married couple in Ontario in which each partner earns $75,000 pays about $15,300 individually ($30,600 total), while a couple (or a single person) with the same $150,000 income earned by one individual bears a much heavier $42,000 tax burden. And the unfairness compounds for families with higher