top | item 26523930

(no title)

stormqloud | 5 years ago

Fronting the money for the supplies usually comes from the fact the tradesperson went on a bender after you paid him last time!

Also in the area where I live, most home trade jobs are done with as much cash as possible to avoid taxes.

The pay cash tax savings is greater then any bank financing.

When you pay 50% income taxes you can see that the incentive to work cash is much much greater then formal financing.

If a car repair was going to cost $1000, the tradesperson keeps $500 after tax. He's better off to offer you $750 cash. Take $500 now (he's paid up).

Then if he still collects the $250 cash that's pure bonus.

I didn't even factor in the 20% sales taxes on the work the buyer would have to pay.

All I can say is don't try to expand to a newly third world country like Canada. I just can't see it working here.

discuss

order

RobKanda|5 years ago

Most tradespeople are professionals, running professional businesses. Whilst your tradesperson might have gone on a bender with the cash last time, that wouldn’t be possible with Kanda. The money doesn’t get to the tradesperson until they’ve completed the job and the customer signs off on it. Then they can go on all the benders they want, they’ve done the work and it’s now their money. Whilst many jobs are still done in cash, the average person doesn’t have sufficient cash in their account to pay for larger outlays, such as a boiler, but could afford it on a monthly payments. What happens in that case? They just don’t get a new boiler, despite needing one? No, they look for an alternative payment option. Kanda offers the tradespeople that option, to offer monthly payment options to their customers, with zero risk to their own business. Finally, in terms of taxes, surely the income tax only applies on profit, with material costs subtracted. But regardless of that, paying tax on a job and getting income, versus not getting the job and not getting any income is surely better. $500 after tax is better than $0 because the customer can’t use you. And when your competitor is offering monthly plans, all of your customers will go to them to get their work done instead

stormqloud|5 years ago

You are talking about union construction workers here. They are only used on commercial jobs mostly.due to the price. All the good trade people work commercial and get paid well. Residential is left with people that can't get the good union jobs mostly.

sterwill|5 years ago

I understand the desire to avoid paying tax by taking cash, but is it common that a tradesperson is paying 50% income tax? I only have a US resident's perspective, but that rate seems very high.

stormqloud|5 years ago

In Canada the top rate of 50 percent hits anyone making over $60k Usd for comparison.

Most trades in Canada are max tax rate, because the max tax rate kicks in at extremely low levels compared to USA.

bombcar|5 years ago

If you count the 15% self employment tax (social security) it can easily reach 50% after state and federal.