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 matching program. Show all posts
Showing posts with label matching program. Show all posts

Monday, December 19, 2016

CRA Information Requests - 2016 Update

Lately, many accountants feel like their main area of practice is responding to information requests sent to our clients by the Canada Revenue Agency (“CRA”). Below, I update you on what I have been seeing in these requests, for both small business owners and individual taxpayers.

What Small Business Owners Need To Know


In 2015, many clients received letters from the CRA requesting support for their equipment (capital cost additions) for income tax purposes. Essentially, the CRA wanted back-up for asset purchases on which capital cost allowance (depreciation) was claimed. These requests were fairly benign and just required some information gathering.

This year, many of my clients have received a CRA information request letter asking for documentary back-up of professional fees claimed on their financial statements.

It appears that for 2016, professional fees are the flavour of year. From the CRA’s perspective, they are looking for personal professional expenses put through small business owner’s corporations. Examples of these types of expenses would be: legal bills for divorces, personal estate planning, and corporate expenses for reorganizations, that should either be all or partially allocated as Eligible Capital Expenditures.

Taxpayers and their accountants are finding these requests extremely time consuming to comply with. The information requested includes a general ledger print out of the expenses, copies of each invoice and where the invoice does not say paid, (invoices issued by professional very rarely are receipted – for example, when your lawyer issues you an invoice for updating your minutes, when you pay, they do not issue a paid receipt) and copies of bank statements to support payment.

Say you have been requested to provide this information for 2014 and 2015; you could be looking for 25-50 invoices if you have a lot of professional subcontractors or are billed monthly by your bookkeeper. You then need to either get each professional to issue a summary receipts letter noting all the invoices issued and paid or provide bank statement back-up (which most clients tend to do).

Once the documentation is provided, the CRA reviews the information (some clients have been contacted to provide additional information or facts) and in some cases issues a reassessment. However, the actual reassessments do not provide any detail as to which expenses have been denied and for what reason(s). Where clients were contacted by the CRA, they assume those expenses were the cause of the reassessment. In other cases, we have to call the CRA to find out what expense(s) were denied. These reassessments are a bit atypical of the CRA who usually provide greater detail in respect of changes made.  

Individual Taxpayers


Non-corporate clients have been receiving several types of information requests. They include:

1. Interest deduction expense claims
2. Foreign tax credit claims
3. Matching income requests

Interest Expense Claims


Several clients have received an information letter request asking for details of their interest expense claims. The letters ask taxpayers for correspondence from the lending institution detailing the original amount of the loan, reasons for the loan, interest expense back-up and bank loan statements. Obtaining this information can be very frustrating, especially where you no longer deal with the lender/bank.

The reasoning behind these information requests is that the CRA is attempting to track the use of funds to a deductible use. i.e. if you took out an investment loan, they want to see the money went into your investment account to purchase marketable securities and was not used partially or wholly for your kitchen renovation.


Foreign Tax Credit Claims


These letters are looking for back-up for foreign taxes paid, where you have claimed a foreign tax credit for investment income or employment or business income earned in another country.

Where you have an investment account with a financial institution and receive a T3/T5 that has foreign income allocated to you and foreign tax withheld, this request is fairly innocuous, as you just essentially send in the T3s or T5s.

However, if you have earned employment income or business income in the United States or another country, you need to provide proof of payment of the taxes. This has become a huge issue for the US, since the IRS does not provide a notice of assessment similar to Canada that shows tax assessed and paid. Thus many people have had to make special requests to the IRS for this information and it is not easily obtained or provided, let alone requests for information from less sophisticated foreign countries. Lately, in the case of the U.S., the CRA is now allowing bank statements and cancelled cheques in lieu of the special request letter, where these documents can support the actual tax paid.

Matching Income Requests


I have written many times about the matching program. Each fall the CRA compares tax slips in its data base to those reported on Canadian’s tax returns. Often slips are missed since they were lost in the mail or misplaced by the taxpayer and the matching program catches the missing slip and related income.

This year, we have started seeing three page print-outs requesting proof that the income was reported. Clients, who have received such requests, have been very concerned that somehow they (or their accountant) missed reporting thousands of dollars of tax slips. However, in most cases, all these slips have been reported, there is just one or two on the three page list that have been reported as perhaps a 50/50 split with a spouse or had an incorrect SIN number.

However, it takes hours to respond to these requests, slip by slip (especially since the financial institutions often summarize income from various sources on T5's, yet report source by source to the CRA. We thus need to reconcile these amounts).

We all accept that the CRA must ensure income tax compliance; however, I wonder if these requests can be streamlined in certain cases? I know some accountants who refuse to Efile and continue to still paper file, solely to reduce the amount of requests they have to deal with.

This is my last post for 2016 and I wish you and your family a Merry Christmas and/or Happy Holidays and a Happy New Year. May your 2017, be information request free :)

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, March 5, 2014

The Costly TFSA Blunder & Playing With Matches - The 20% Matching Penalty

In general, I understand the policy reasoning behind many of the income tax legislative changes made by the Department of Finance (that does not mean I agree with all these policy changes). I also typically understand the rationale behind most of the CRA's administrative polices. However, there are four tax rules and administrative policies I cannot comprehend and are major pet peeves of mine. They are:
  1. You can be penalized for re-contributing to your TFSA in the same year you withdrew funds. This rule may make administrative sense for the CRA, but when 75,000-100,000 people over-contribute/incur penalties each year, there is a problem with the rule in my opinion.
  2. You can be penalized 20% of the income you did not report on a T-slip, even though the CRA has that information on hand.
  3. The necessity to file a T1135 Foreign Income Verification Form to report specific foreign stocks that do not pay a dividend, even if they are held at a Canadian Institution (rule on hold for 2013, to be effective 2014, see last weeks post).
  4. The fact the CRA has an April 30th personal filing deadline, yet many slips (T3, T5013) are not issued until the 2nd week of April (even though the deadline for those slips is March 31st). IMHO, the deadline to file all these tax slips should be moved up 15 days.
I was fortunate enough to be interviewed by Rob Carrick of the Globe and Mail on my first two pet peeves and was thus able to vent on a medium other than my BBC soap box.

The Costly TFSA Blunder 


Many Canadians continue to over-contribute to their TFSAs. Most of these over-contributions result because you take money out of your TFSA and then re-contribute those funds back in the same year. However, unless you have additional contribution room, you are not allowed to re-contribute those funds until January 1st of the next year.

As TFSAs have been promoted by the CRA and financial institutions as a savings account, where you can take money out and put money back in; the re-contribution rule is counter intuitive and a trap for many Canadians.

I discuss this issue and other TFSA related issues in this interview with Rob.

Playing With Matches- The 20% Matching Penalty


The CRA’s matching program catches the non-reporting of income every fall. Each year the CRA checks the T-slip information in its database against Canadian taxpayer’s income tax returns to ensure the income you reported matches the CRA's database records. Where the income filed by a taxpayer does not match, an income tax reassessment is mailed to the taxpayer asking for the income tax due. If the taxpayer is a first time offender, they are just assessed the actual income tax owing and possibly some interest. If this is the second occurrence in the last four years, a 20% penalty of the unreported income is assessed.

Under Subsection 163(1) of the Income Tax Act, where a taxpayer has failed to report income twice within a four-year period, he/she will be subject to a penalty. The penalty is calculated as 10% of the amount you failed to report the second time. A corresponding provincial penalty is also applied, so the total penalty is 20% of the unreported income. This penalty can apply even if you owe no tax!

To avoid the chance of this penalty, I strongly suggest you make a checklist of any T-slips you expect to receive and follow-up with any missing slips. You may also want to call the CRA in June or July and confirm with them all the slips their system is showing. You can do this with your "My Account"; however, not all slips are reflected online.

I discuss this insidious penalty and other income matching issues in this interview with Rob. 

Tax Tips for Dividend Investors

 

Rob interviewed me on a third, less controversial topic, that being tax tips for dividend investors. Please keep in mind the three points I discussed in the interview. When you prepare your tax return, you should have dividend income from the same companies as you reported last year, unless:

1. The company stopped paying dividends;
2. You are missing a T3/T5 slip - if so, please follow-up or you may be subject to the 20% penalty discussed;
3. You sold the stock - if so, you must report a capital gain.

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.

Wednesday, September 11, 2013

The 20% CRA Penalty for Missing T-Slip Information - Two Solutions to Minimize the Issue

On Monday, I discussed the 20% penalty that thousands of Canadians are assessed each year for not reporting income that the CRA already has on hand from the country’s employers and financial institutions. I think I made it clear, I'm of the view the penalty is excessive in most cases.

The CRA’s matching program is designed to ensure taxpayers have reported all the income reflected on their T-slips. I have no issue with this objective. However, I do have an issue with taxpayers being penalized for failing to report this income. More specifically, I am perplexed as to how you can be deemed to not have reported income if it is already sitting in the CRA's database courtesy of your employer or financial institution? Should taxpayers be subject to 20% penalties for  failing to confirm income already reported?

Today, rather than continuing to rant about this issue, I offer two solutions.

1. The CRA should populate (with T-slip tax data) a draft online tax return for each and every Canadian. Taxpayers would access this draft return through their CRA “ My Account”. This tax return would reflect all T-slip information provided to the CRA for each individual by their employer and financial institutions. Initially, this return could be informational only. By this I mean, the return would only reflect your income information and would not calculate your income tax liability.

2. A more practical solution would be to provide full real-time access to all T-slips issued to each taxpayer. Currently your "My Account" only allows you to view T4 related slips such as T4's, T4A's, T4A(P), T4A(OAS) etc. However, it does not contain any other T3, T5 or T5013 information.

These solutions would ensure Canadians are aware of any and all income they earned in any given year that was reportable to the CRA (obviously this would exclude capital gains, rental income, self-employment income etc. that relies on taxpayer self-reporting). This solution would avoid any issues with lost mail or slips addressed to old addresses.

As I am not a software developer, I have no idea how difficult it would be to develop a simple return for each individual that is updated for any T-slip data on a real-time basis? However, it would not seem to require a large technological advancement.

If I ignore the potential lost revenue I would have as a personal tax preparer (which I could easily live without since each tax season takes a month or two off my life) and think long-term; if the CRA created an online informational only tax return, this return could eventually be enhanced such that it could become each Canadian’s actual online personal tax return.

Maybe I am missing the complexities of creating an online tax return? On the other hand, maybe this is not such a far-fetched solution.

P.S. Yesterday a reader sent me a copy of an email they sent to their MP about the "unfairness" of the 20% penalty. Good for them. Who would have thought the BBC would be the catalyst for tax policy changes :)

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. Please note the blog post is time sensitive and subject to changes in legislation or law.

Monday, September 9, 2013

The CRA's Matching Program - Mismatch and You May be Assessed a 20% Penalty


How can you be issued a 20% penalty for missing information the CRA has on hand? Read on and you will find out!

In the next month or two, the CRA’s matching program will begin kicking out notices of reassessment to Canadians whose reported income on their 2012 income tax returns does not match the CRA's records. Some of these income tax filers will be assessed penalties of 20% on income not reported. Yes, that is income not reported, not tax underpaid! This penalty applies to income tax information your employer or financial institution provided to the CRA which was not reported on your return. In most cases, the omission of income was purely unintentional.

What is wrong with this picture? How can one be considered to not have reported income that the CRA has in its database? Is this not a penalty for failing to confirm income, as oppossed to not reporting income?

In this two part blog, I am going to look at the penalty itself and why I think it is egregious, as well as how the CRA could easily remedy the situation. Long-time followers of this blog will be aware I have written about this penalty a couple of times. However, this week’s blogs look at the penalty from two new perspectives:

1. The matching aspect
2. How I think the CRA could easily address this issue.

So let’s start from the beginning.

The Matching Program

 

The CRA’s matching program catches the non-reporting of income every fall. Each year the CRA checks the T-slip information in its database against Canadian taxpayer’s income tax returns to ensure the T-slip income reported matches. Where the income filed by a taxpayer does not match the CRA's database records, an income tax reassessment is mailed to the taxpayer asking for the income tax due. If the taxpayer is a first time offender, they are just assessed the actual income tax owing and possibly some interest. If this is the second occurrence in the last four years, a 20% penalty of the unreported income is assessed.

The Penalty Provision


Under Subsection 163(1) of the Income Tax Act, where a taxpayer has failed to report income twice within a four-year period, he/she will be subject to a penalty. The penalty is calculated as 10% of the
amount you failed to report the second time. A corresponding provincial penalty is also applied, so the total penalty is 20% of the unreported income. 

 

Ouch! Is this Fair?


I find this penalty unfair for the following reasons:

1. It is excessive. I can accept a penalty of 5%, maybe 10%, but 20%?

2. The penalty can be levied even if you owe no income tax. I.e.: If someone in Ontario fails to report a T4 slip with $5,000 of employment income and the slip also reported $2,325 of income tax deducted, they would owe no income tax, as the maximum marginal income tax rate of 46.41% was applied (ignoring Ontario supertax). However, if you had failed to report income in any of the three prior years, the penalty under subsection 163(1) would be $1,000 (20% x $5,000), even though you owed no income tax and the CRA was provided this information by your employer. 

3. The penalty can vary wildly on the exact same total of non-reported income. If you fail to report $2,000 two years ago and fail to report $100 this year, your penalty is $20. However, if you failed to report $100 two years ago and failed to report $2,000 this year, the penalty is $400! That is a huge difference in penalties for the exact same total of unreported income.

4. Most penalties relate to T-slips taxpayers did not knowingly ignore or evade. In most cases, the missing income relates to T-slips lost in the mail or sent to the wrong address. Also, as a reader notes below in the comment section, many T-slips are now issued online and easy to miss.

According to an article by Tom McFeat of CBC News, the number of Canadians penalized for this repeated failure to report income totaled over 81,000 in 2011 with an income tax cost of slightly over $78,000,000.

To be clear, my issue with this penalty is that taxpayers in most cases are being penalized where there is no intent to hide income and the CRA receives that information. However, I am not as forgiving with the non-reporting of rental income, capital gains or self-employment which relies on taxpayer honesty.

Tax Tip for T-slips Received after You Filed Your Return?


I think most people will agree that this penalty is excessive. Wednesday I suggest a simple solution to the issue. However, here is a quick tip before you leave. If you received a T-slip after filing your tax return and ignored the slip since it was a small amount, dig it out tonight and file a T1 adjustment as soon as possible before the matching program gets you. Even a small $10 missed slip will start your clock ticking for a potentially larger penalty if you miss reporting income again in the subsequent three years.

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. Please note the blog post is time sensitive and subject to changes in legislation or law.