The Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) in internal polling considered whether to make publicly available a blacklist of individuals who cheat on their taxes, according to a report.
“More than 1 in 3 Canadians, 35 percent, strongly agree the Canada Revenue Agency should publish a list of people found guilty of tax offences,” said a report titled “2022 CRA Annual Corporate Research Quantitative Phase” and obtained by Blacklock’s Reporter.
The report did not detail why the agency polled the question.
The CRA currently names individuals convicted of and jailed for committing tax fraud, but not Tax Court plaintiffs or other taxpayers penalized for evading taxes by hiding income….
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