Quebec Stock Savings Plan

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Quebec Stock Savings Plan (French: Régime d'épargne-actions (RÉA)), was founded on March 27, 1979 by Jacques Parizeau. The QSSP offered taxpayers generous tax write-offs for investments in new public stock issues of companies whose head office was in Quebec and was governed by the Quebec Taxation Act. Tax expenditures under the QSSP amounted to nearly $1 billion from its beginning to its end.[1] It was replaced by the SME Growth Stock Plan, now known as the Stock Savings Plan II, on April 22, 2005.[2]

Goals[]

  • to alleviate the heavy tax load of Quebec's middle and high-income earners
  • to finance Quebec companies with risk capital
  • to acquaint Quebec's population at large with the stock market

References[]

  1. ^ Carpentier, Cecile; Suret, Jean-Marc (2006). "The Quebec Stock Savings Plan: A Tax Expenditure Analysis". ProQuest. Canadian Tax Journal. p. 2. Retrieved 6 December 2021.
  2. ^ Takhmizdjian, Joseph (Hovsep); Marquette, Charles P. "The Stock Savings Plan II". Lexology. Borden Ladner Gervais LLP. Retrieved 6 December 2021.


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