My name is Mark Goodfield. Welcome to The Blunt Bean Counter ™, a blog that shares my thoughts on income taxes, finance and the psychology of money. I am a Chartered Professional Accountant. This blog is meant for everyone, but in particular for high net worth individuals and owners of private corporations. My posts are blunt, opinionated and even have a twist of humour/sarcasm. You've been warned. Please note the blog posts are time sensitive and subject to changes in legislation or law.
Showing posts with label liberals. Show all posts
Showing posts with label liberals. Show all posts

Monday, January 1, 2018

The Revised Tax On Split Income Rules

On December 13, 2017 the Liberals released a new and improved version of their income sprinkling/tax on split income (“TOSI”) proposals. The government’s backgrounder stated, “the revised draft legislative proposals include changes to better target and simplify their application”. I can agree with the targeted assertion; as some overly expansive drafting was corrected, but simplification, not in my world.

The new rules while more objective than the previous version, are still very subjective. In my opinion these revisions will just create more angst among the small business owners caught by these proposals and will result in court cases for years. Add in that these rules were released the week before the Christmas holidays and not issued in conjunction with the passive income rules that are supposedly to come in the next budget (planning for dividends may be dependent or intertwined with the final passive rules) and I don’t think the Finance Minister will be winning any politician of the year awards from any private business associations.

In my opinion, all these TOSI rules would not be necessary if the government would have simply disallowed income sprinkling for anyone under age 25 that that does not work full-time in a business and for all Canadians (whether business owners or not) started taxing spouses as a single-family unit. But then, nobody asked me.

Today, I will summarize whom I see as the winners and losers of these new proposals and those caught in the grey area. Finally, I will provide some details on the revisions to the TOSI rules.

As this legislation is new and will likely still require some clarification, I want to make it clear that this post is solely for general information purposes. You should consult with your professional advisor, so they can review these proposals based on your specific fact situation.

Scorecard


Winners


1. Business owners over 65

2. Individuals who inherited shares of a small business

3. Businesses where shares, votes and value are allocated evenly among family members and are not service businesses

4. Canadians who work at least 20 hours a week on a regular and continuous basis in the family business

5. Retired owners that were caught under the initial rules because they were considered related even though an arm’s length person now ran the corporation

Losers


1. Beneficiaries of shares held by Family Trusts

2. Professionals

3. Small businesses that provide services and do not sell products

4. Estate freezes recently undertaken and/or where there is large redemption value remaining in the preference shares issued upon the freeze

Unclear


1. Families were shares have already been distributed from a trust or were purchased upon incorporation and the parents have voting control

2. Estate freezes where most shares have been redeemed

The New Rules


The new rules are very detailed and I do not intend to regurgitate all of them here. I will summarize the rules only at a high level. For details and FAQ’s, please see this CRA link  (scroll half-way down the page to related products and you will see guidance and other more technical material).

The new rules have four key exclusions: 1. An excluded share test 2. Excluded business test 3. Reasonable rate of return test and 4. Retirement and inheritance exclusion.

I will summarize them below and discuss how they may affect you.

Excluded Shares- The share ownership test


The TOSI rules will not apply where you have attained the age of 25 and all of the following conditions are met:

  • You own at least 10% of the outstanding shares of a corporation in terms of votes and value and the corporation meets all the following conditions:

(a) It earns less than 90% of its income from the provision of services

(b) It is not a professional corporation

(c) All or substantially all its income is not derived from a related business

At first blush, this test seems like a god-send for private corporations where family members are shareholders and have attained the age of 25. However, in many cases the parents have the majority of the voting rights and may have significant value in preference shares as result of a prior reorganization or estate freeze. Where the issue is only votes, you may be able to reorganize your corporate share structure to meet this condition as the government has stated that even though the rules are applicable January 1, 2018, you have until December 31, 2018 to get your corporate house “in order”.

This rule will essentially preclude the use of family trusts for income splitting purposes other than the capital gains exemption. It is important to note, that the TOSI rules will not apply to capital gains on the sale of qualified farm or fishing property and to the sale of qualified small business corporations (“QSBC”). Most private corporation owners reading this blog post have shares that either qualify as QSBC shares, or can be made to qualify for the capital gains exemption through a purifying transaction (see this post I wrote on this topic). The exclusion for the sale of these shares is not age dependent (however, where an individual is under 18 and the sale is to a related party, the exemption will be problematic). Not that I want to look a gift horse in the mouth, but we have all these complex rules to prevent income sprinkling and you are still allowed to allocate the 2018 exemption amount of $848,252 to a minor?

Professional corporations are excluded, as they have been one of the main targets of the Liberals throughout this whole debacle. However, pay careful attention to the word “services”. At first glance you think services is just another arrow aimed at professionals, but services as written (it is not defined anywhere) would seem to include the services of a barber, gardener, massage therapist, computer consultant etc. Many small businesses may not meet this exclusion if they don’t earn at least 11% of their revenue from the sale of products. In my opinion, this provision may “blow-back at the government once it is better understood; assuming the literal interpretation is the proper reading. It should be noted that if you and your spouse/children 18 years old and over meet the labour criteria for the excluded business test based discussed below, then having a service business will not in itself preclude you from income sprinkling.

The related business in (c) above is just a provision to ensure a service business does not impose another business between it and the family member to get around the rules, although, some tax observers are concerned this provision could accidentally cause issues where shares are held through a holding company. This is one area that the Liberals will need to clarify.

Excluded Business –The labour test


The TOSI rules will not apply where you are 18 or over and have been employed by an excluded business, which is “a business in which the individual is actively engaged on a regular, continuous and substantial basis in the taxation year of the individual in which an amount is received or in any five previous taxation years". The CRA states that “To access the exclusion in respect of five previous years of labour contributions, it is not necessary that the five previous years be consecutive or after 2017. Any combination of five previous years would satisfy the test”. The test will also account for businesses’ that are seasonal, such that the test will apply to the seasonal period

Finally, the CRA says “To provide greater certainty (but without limiting the generality of the test), an individual who works an average of 20 hours per week during the part of the year that a business operates will be deemed to be actively engaged on a regular, continuous and substantial basis for the year. If an individual does not meet the 20-hour threshold, then it will be a question of fact as to whether the individual was actively engaged in the business on a regular, continuous and substantial basis. However, even if an individual aged 25 or older does not meet the regular, continuous and substantial threshold, the TOSI will apply to amounts derived from a related business only to the extent that they are unreasonable (i.e., only the unreasonable excess will be subject to the TOSI)”.

This labour test is a fairly clear bright-line test; you must work over 20 hours per week for at least five previous years or you get into a subjective reasonability test that will likely result in most amounts being in excess of reasonability.

The CRA provided some guidance in the materials stating that records such as timesheets, schedules and logbooks will be sufficient to confirm the hours a person worked.

Reasonable Return on Capital Test


There are two tests within this exclusion:

1. Safe Harbour Test

2. Reasonable return test

Safe Harbour Test


Where an individual 18-24 years of age has contributed capital, and does not qualify for the excluded share or excluded business exclusions, they may still qualify for a “safe harbor exemption” (No that does not mean you take your money and hide it in a safe harbor in the Turks and Caicos).

It means that you will be provided an exclusion from TOSI income to the extent of your capital contribution x a prescribed rate (currently only 1%). i.e. If you contribute $100,000, you multiply the $100,000 x 1%=$1,000 and you can exclude $1,000. To be a blunt bean counter, this exclusion is pretty much useless, since a) The reality is that in probably 95% of the cases, most shareholders only contribute $100 or less to purchase their shares and b) as noted above, the low prescribed rate means even if you did contribute a fair bit of capital, such as $100k, your exclusion is still a meager $1,000.

Reasonable Return Test


For those 25 years of age and older, this very subjective test says that a reasonableness test is to be applied to such factors as:

  • Work performed 
  • Risks assumed by the individual in the business 
  • Any other factors that may be relevant

Your guess is as good as mine as to how this would be applied. Consider Mr. A who is a shareholder and works full time in his business. His daughter also a shareholder, is a computer science student who comes up with a software application that leads to over one million dollars in new revenue for the business. What is her "reasonable" entitlement to dividends?

Retirement and Inheritance


The initial drafting of the proposals appeared to have inadvertently caused the TOSI rules to apply to retired private corporation owners and Canadians who had inherited private corporation shares. The new proposals have addressed these concerns.

The new TOSI rules provide the following exemptions:

1. Where an active owner-manager (someone who met the labour contribution rules) reaches age 65, the TOSI rules will not apply to their spouse (no matter their age). Note: these rules do not mean you can split your dividends like you do your pension income. They only allow you to pay dividends to your spouse who is not excluded by any of the provisions and avoid the TOSI rules where you are 65 or over.

2. If you are over 18 and inherit shares in a private corporation from someone who met the TOSI one of the TOSI exclusions, those shares will continue to be excluded.

Salary


The new rules do not apply to salary. However, there has always been a reasonableness test for salaries paid to family members vis a vie what would you pay an arm’s length persons and that rule will still apply.

Prescribed loans


The new rules do not appear to prevent the use of prescribed loans where you purchase public securities. See this blog and speak to your advisor about whether this strategy would be advisable for your situation.

At this time, I am not entirely comfortable answering questions on these proposals, until we have further clarity. So, if you ask a question or provide a comment on this post, I may not answer the question or will couch the answer. So please don’t expect definitive answers if you ask a question.

This site provides general information on various tax issues and other matters. The information is not intended to constitute professional advice and may not be appropriate for a specific individual or fact situation. It is written by the author solely in their personal capacity and cannot be attributed to the accounting firm with which they are affiliated. It is not intended to constitute professional advice, and neither the author nor the firm with which the author is associated shall accept any liability in respect of any reliance on the information contained herein. Readers should always consult with their professional advisors in respect of their particular situation. Please note the blog post is time sensitive and subject to changes in legislation or law.

Monday, October 26, 2015

The Liberal Victory - How it May Affect TFSAs, Personal and Corporate Taxes

Last week on Twitter, one of my favourite tweets was by sportswriter Dave Hogg. He tweeted, “Two thirds of Canada is covered by the Liberal Party. The other third is covered by Kevin Pillar" (the Toronto Blue Jays center fielder). 

Unfortunately, since the Blue Jays are toast (how could they not score that man from third?), I will talk about the Liberal victory and what it may mean to income taxes. I say “may mean” because, until we see legislation, we are never sure as to what proposals or promises will be implemented and the exact wording of the actual legislation.

The Roll-back of the TFSA Contribution Limit


Liberal leader Justin Trudeau (as I understand it, Mr. Trudeau is a prime minister-designate, thus I will not call him Prime Minister in this article to be technically correct, and just stick with Mr. Trudeau for now) emphatically stated several times he would cancel the tax-free savings account (" TFSA") limit increase from $5,500 to $10,000. There is much hand-wringing and concern over what will happen to the extra $4,500 many people contributed this year.

This is probably much ado about nothing. Personally, I think the Liberals will probably just do something like this to clean up the issue:
  1. Send out a press release prior to December 31, 2015 (assuming they cannot pass legislation on time) saying that as of January 1, 2016, the maximum cumulative TFSA limit will be re-set to $42,000 ($36,500 old limit [before the 2015 increase to $41,000] plus $5,500).

  2. State that when the legislation is passed, it will be retroactive to January 1, 2016, so if anyone contributes in excess of $42,000, they will be subject to over-contribution penalties.
Assuming I guess correctly, this would clean-up the TFSA issue. Those who contributed the extra $4,500 in 2015 will only have another $1,000 to contribute in 2016 and they will be warned in advance that if they over-contribute they will be subject to a penalty. Easy peasy IMHO.

Potential Changes to Your Personal Taxes


The Liberal platform included some of the following potential changes:
  • Reduce the middle income tax bracket ($44,700 - $89,401) from 22% to 20.5%, resulting in a potential tax savings of up to $670 for those earning between $44,700 and $89,401.
  • Cancel the Family Tax Cut which provides for up to $2,000 in family income tax savings. This seems counter-intuitive based on the middle income tax cut, so there may be more to this proposal.
  • Increase taxes on people making more than $200,000 by creating a new tax bracket of 33%. My comments on this proposal were provided to Rob Carrick of The Globe and Mail in this article. As noted in Rob’s article, my concern is once you increase the highest marginal rate past 50%, you break a significant psychological barrier. I know this is a bit of an airy-fairy comment, but you would be surprised at how many people were already upset last year by their increase in personal taxes when Ontario changed the tax rates, and high-wage earners were paying 49.53% tax on income over $220k. Wait till this year when they will be paying 53.53% at the highest marginal rate.
  • Remove the Conservative plans to gradually raise the age of Old Age Security to 69.

Potential Streaming of the Small Business Corporate Tax Rate


The Liberals stated they plan to follow through with a proposed small business corporate tax rate decrease from 11% to 9%. However, they want to ensure that private corporations, known as Canadian Controlled Private Corporations ("CCPCs") are not used to reduce personal income tax obligations for high-income earners.

As noted in this National Post article, Mr. Trudeau said the following in a CBC interview, “A large percentage of small businesses are actually just ways for wealthier Canadians to save on their taxes. We want to reward the people who are actually creating jobs, and contributing in concrete ways. So there’s a little tweaking to do around that.”

In a follow up article  Mr. Trudeau said “that several studies have shown that more than half of small business owners are high-net-worth individuals who incorporate…to avoid paying as high taxes as they otherwise would”. The Post noted that “in that group are doctors and lawyers, groups that may find themselves squeezed by the policy Trudeau loosely outlined this week”.

Mr. Trudeau went on to say that “We want to focus on helping small business owners who are working hard, who are creating jobs for members of their community and serving their community. We are committed to evidence-based policies and I will make no apologies for that.”

To the best of my knowledge, there has been no discussion on how the Liberals would carve out part of the small business population from using the small business deduction. This would be an extremely complex piece of legislation.

In the Rob Carrick article, I noted that I would expect some people may start considering leaving Canada to move to a lower tax jurisdiction or consider moving their funds offshore. As discussed in one of my earlier blogs, in my personal experience, this is typically something only the ultra-rich undertake. What I have found is that once people understand the income tax consequences (deemed disposition of certain assets) that results upon emigration and when they account for family and healthcare, they typically grin and bear income tax increases. I do have some concern that higher tax rates may impact the amount higher income earners invest in their current or new businesses.

Last week a doctor told me he was starting to see other medical professionals consider leaving Canada for the United States. I told him I was surprised as I thought that exodus had been stemmed by better pay policies implemented over the last ten years or so. If that doctor is correct, it will be interesting to see if higher personal and corporate tax rates are implemented, whether mobile professionals and small business owners will in fact consider leaving Canada for lower taxing jurisdictions.

This site provides general information on various tax issues and other matters. The information is not intended to constitute professional advice and may not be appropriate for a specific individual or fact situation. It is written by the author solely in their personal capacity and cannot be attributed to the accounting firm with which they are affiliated. It is not intended to constitute professional advice, and neither the author nor the firm with which the author is associated shall accept any liability in respect of any reliance on the information contained herein. Readers should always consult with their professional advisors in respect of their particular situation.

Wednesday, April 25, 2012

Taxing the Rich in Ontario


I had neither the energy nor the intention to write another blog post this week. However, I cannot resist piping in on the Ontario Liberals imposing a 2% surtax on those in Ontario earning more than $500,000. I mean, the Liberals only want to "pay down the deficit faster", while it is the evil NDP that want to tax the rich.

It is always smart politics to tax the rich. However, in my opinion, the “rich” in Canada are already highly taxed. In Ontario the highest marginal income tax rate of 46.41% starts at only $132,406. Does a yearly income in Ontario of $132k make you rich? Tack on the HST and tax freedom day will soon be October 31st.

A tax on the rich is pure tax revenue to the government unless it causes a change in behaviour. Where an income tax increase changes behaviour, it becomes dangerous and despite what Andrea Horwath of the NDP thinks, her constituency requires job creation by the "rich" and fat-cat corporations to be employed.

As someone who deals with many so called "rich people", this is my take on the situation:

Employees


High earning employees such as investment bankers, lawyers, the occasional accountant, are client driven and their behaviour is typically not changed by an increase in taxes as client work must be done. Thus, in the employee's case, it is usually a grin and bear it attitude.

Self-employed


As an accountant, you don’t know how many times I hear it is not worth the time and effort to get more business or pick up new clients as “I am only keeping half of what I make anyways”.

The self-employed group typically has direct control over whether it is willing to incur more income tax and continue growing their businesses. This group can impact tax revenue and job growth and in my opinion, every increase in income tax is a huge disincentive to the growth of their business, since many already feel over-taxed.

Included in this group maybe some medical professionals (mostly specialists). I would suggest that for this group which is capped in earnings already (although to a lesser extent than it used to be) any increase in tax creates another disincentive to take on new patients, but that is a separate battle the Liberals are taking on. 

Entrepreneurs


Although there is always a new generation of entrepreneurs arriving on the scene, I have learned over the years that successful entrepreneurs are often repeat entrepreneurs – they may fail once or twice, but have huge successes multiple times. Does income tax drive their decisions? Often yes, but sometimes no. For some it is just the challenge and their genetic make-up.

This is the group that probably matters the most (ignoring big corporations). They create companies and create jobs. For this group, I think there is just an invisible tipping point where income tax becomes so high it becomes a disincentive. I don’t think this new surtax is the tipping point, however, I would suggest as we edge ever closer to 50%, the closer the government comes to hitting the magical disincentive button.

Income Tax Reality


Many self-employed people and entrepreneurs utilize corporations and family trusts that will allow them to somewhat mitigate this issue. What this surtax will do is probably cause many people to push the income splitting envelope.

In conclusion, I think the Liberals walk away essentially Scott-free from this 2% surtax increase. However, if they try and tack on another income tax increase in the near future, I would suggest they would be approaching the tipping point where taxpayer's behaviour may change.


Bloggers note: I should not post 5 days before the end of tax season when I can't think straight. I was remiss in not noting the following--There is an Ontario surtax of 56% levied on ON428 tax form, lines 50 and 51.  As the 2% surtax will be levied before the 56% surtax, the 2% surtax is really a 3.12% tax increase (2%  plus 2% x.56%).

The blogs posted on The Blunt Bean Counter provide information of a general nature. These posts should not be considered specific advice; as each reader's personal financial situation is unique and fact specific. Please contact a professional advisor prior to implementing or acting upon any of the information contained in one of the blogs.