LATEST NEWS
February 9, 2010
Ontario businesses scramble to ready for arrival of HST
With less than six months to go, business across Ontario are scrambling to get their accounting and billing systems ready to deal with the implementation of the harmonized sales tax.
Love it or hate it, Craig Robertson of consulting firm Deloitte and Touche told a seminar at the Toronto Construction Association, it’s a done deal.
For construction companies and their clients there isn’t a massive change that they will have to deal with, he said, since the GST is already programmed in and in most cases the eight per cent provincial retail sales tax is also payable.
On billing for services where until now only GST was payable, the total tax will be the 13 per cent of the HST.
“And that’s not a bad thing,” he said, “because the owner of the project will now get an input tax credit (ITC) of 13 per cent instead of the five per cent they had been getting.”
The convergence of the two taxes and the ability to claim a 13 per cent ITC will reduce the tax burden overall and will mean a slight adjustment in cash flow, he said.
“General Motors doesn’t care because they get an ITC but the Bank of Montreal doesn’t like it because financial institutions (including insurance companies) can’t claim an ITC under the rules,” he said.
Construction companies, however, can claim the ITC and it will make things easier in the long run for accounting and billing purposes.
Beverly Gilbert, a Calgary-based chartered accountant tax group leader with law firm Borden Ladner Gervais LLP says companies need to read the fine print in this new tax regime.
If a contract was signed before the deadline, the HST is payable after July 1.
While in most cases the client will simply be billed 13 per cent and pay it, in other cases the responsibility of taxes may be spelled out differently in the wording of the contract.
Complications are also created by new methods of putting together projects with digital technology.
Construction firms, like many large enterprises, pride themselves on the expertise of their people and the ability to bring virtual teams together as needs dictate.
This starts to create issues around tax liabilities when a multi-disciplinary team spread across the country works on a file and then looks to bill the client.
“If you are a firm that does business only in Alberta, for example, you don’t have to worry,” she said in a telephone interview. “But if you do business in Ontario things change, even if you just have an agent there.”
Mitigating whether the tax is payable, regardless of where the head office is, rests on the question of where the service was supplied. If, for example, the service to a client was supplied in Ontario, regardless of where the client is, the HST is payable.
Even if only part of the service was supplied in Ontario, there could be HST payable, she says, noting that even if as little as 10 per cent of the work was supplied from Ontario, then the HST is payable on the entire billing.
Other considerations are around where negotiations took place. If they took place in Ontario, the HST is payable.
This is going to create some headaches and adjustments and a rethinking of some business models, she says.
| CURRENT STORIES |
- Construction Sector Council’s firm-capacity survey to identify challenges
- Pride, sadness as Hogg's Hollow memorial unveiled
- Commemorative quilt gets permanent home
- Getting a lift at iLoft condos in Toronto
- ‘Sandhogs’ who perished had diverse personal stories
- Construction Safety Association of Ontario saluted for pioneering role in provincial health and safety
- Work continues on Mona Lisa Residences in North York, Ontario
- Association of Consulting Engineering Companies campaign targets students
- China to bid on U.S. high-speed rail projects
- Northern Ontario First Nations demand consultation on chromite mining
- Filling labour gap a top priority for incoming Canadian Construction Association chair
- Safety issues raised as Vancouver hires chief electrical inspector
- Buildex Edmonton seminar to examine worksite safety on green building projects
- Canadian Construction Association awards highlight excellence
- Chilliwack Cultural Centre project sets tilt-up concrete record
- Imperial Oil choses Finning International as mining equipment supplier for oilsands project
- BC Hydro awards purchase agreements for 19 clean wind, run-of-river energy projects
- Ledcor continues construction on mixed-use project in Vancouver
- Role of general contractor has evolved over the years
- Alberta Pipe Trades College ready to open the valve on training
- Friction grows between generals and trades during recent downturn
- Green building adding to administrative burden for contractors
| ALEX’S ECONOMICS BLOG |

Reed Construction Data Chief Economist Alex Carrick discusses current developments in the North American economic environment with emphasis on the construction industry.
- Sub-sector investment spending intentions from Statistics Canada’s latest survey (March 17, 2010)
- A dozen incredible measurement sets on Canada’s changing ethnic mix (March 9, 2010)
- How fragile is recovery around the world? (March 3, 2010)
- More







