For the most part, your suggestions fall on employers, and ultimately customers of those businesses. Higher minimum wages will get passed on in the form of higher prices, or businesses will cut back on hours more aggressively. I do agree that the multi-residential property tax rate is too probably high, but market value based property taxes don't make a whole lot of sense anyway.
With respect to most of my suggestions falling on employers...
I think first off we need to note any system of any kind, be it through laws, policies, programs or taxes under which anyone in our society gains, they do so through some form of redistribution from another party or parties.
This is what occurs when you buy a product; and the seller makes a profit, they gain, you lose; to be clear, that doesn't mean there's any wrong going on, its a transaction, and each side is extracting value, but in strict $ terms, one side is doing better than the other (if not the business will go broke).
If you are advocating for no redistribution of any kind, arguments of fairness aside, I would argue that would collapse the economy; if not, then the question is not whether to redistribute but rather how, and how much.
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With that said; I would further beg to differ on the suggestion that I place a burden on employers; a shift towards full-time employment does NOT increase costs, in fact it lowers payroll taxes and fixed costs as fewer employees work at any one business. Any system where people work 2 jobs (or more) for different employers in order to gain enough paid hours to survive is not only inefficient for the worker, but also the employer as each worker has fixed costs not only in taxes and benefits but also in size of a break room, in the complexity and staff hours involved in schedule making etc. I simply suggested that government remove some dis-incentives to full-time employment (like private medical benefits) but uploading these to the public sector. A portion of that cost would then be born by business (as it is now when they pay Blue Cross or Manulife etc.) for provision of those benefits, while the balance would be funded through other revenues.
I would argue that enhances competitiveness. By lower the cost of doing business and in particular a cost payroll.
A modestly higher minimum wage is a negligible cost in the industries in question. Labour is 11% of the typical fast food cost structure, so a 10% increase in minimum wage in this sector represents a 1.1% increase in cost above inflation. Negligible and almost entirely offset by lower employee turnover costs. As a customer, your combo would rise a whopping 10c assuming 100% pass-through of costs; a burden this is not. Besides, lower poverty and social service costs ultimately reduce your tax bill.
Finally, on paid vacation, it has been shown that most Northern and West European workers, including Germans are typically more productive than that most Canadian labour; this has been traced, in part, to greater vacation time which leaves workers feeling more motivated and refreshed and able to accomplish more per hour in their non-vacation times.
So, no or very little net burden.