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|    Message 38,457 of 39,416    |
|    Alan Baggett to All    |
|    RRSP scenarios change for teens, low-inc    |
|    14 May 14 04:28:26    |
      From: canadarevenue.agency@canada.com              RRSP scenarios change for teens, low-income retirees : CRA SOTW              By Terry McBride,        The Starphoenix January 20, 2014               For most Canadians, a Registered Retirement Savings Plan (RRSP) is a very good       way to save money for retirement. However RRSPs require special consideration       by three types of Canadians - teenagers, low-income earners and U.S. citizens.              Teenagers Are you eager to teach your teenager about the benefits of starting       to save money at a young age? Suppose your child received wages from       babysitting or mowing lawns, for example. That means your child can file tax       returns to report this income,        without paying tax, to generate RRSP contribution room for the following year.       If your child opens an RRSP, he or she could make RRSP contributions even       before reaching the age of majority (18 in Saskatchewan). Parents or       grandparents should not try to        help out by making additional gift-contributions to the RRSP. There is a stiff       penalty charged on contributions that exceed the teenager's RRSP limit.              If a low-income teenager is not even taxable, don't waste the RRSP deduction       by claiming it immediately. Defer claiming the RRSP deduction until years       later when your child is earning enough (more than $43,953) to create       second-bracket tax savings.              Low-income retirees The ideal, most tax-efficient scenario is to make RRSP       contributions in a high tax bracket while you are working, and, years later,       make withdrawals in a low tax bracket while retired.       However, the worst-case scenario is for someone to make contributions in the       lowest tax bracket while working, and, years later, make withdrawals in a       higher tax bracket while retired. If you are a worker in a lowwage job,       contributing to a small RRSP,        but hardly likely to have a retirement income over $20,000 per year, you could       find yourself eligible to receive some Guaranteed Income Supplement (GIS) at       age 65.              The income test for GIS means your GIS benefits are reduced by 50 cents for       every dollar of taxable income from RRSP or RRIF withdrawals that you report.       That 50 per cent "clawback" is on top of the 26 per cent lowest bracket rate       (in Saskatchewan). It        is not tax efficient to deduct RRSP contributions at 26 per cent and later pay       tax at 76 per cent on withdrawals.              In that scenario, using a tax free savings account makes more sense than       contributing to an RRSP.       U.S. citizens Are you a dual citizen, born in the U.S., who resides in Canada?       Was one of your parents a U.S. citizen when you were born in Canada? In any       case, if you are a U.S. citizen, you should know that the Internal Revenue       Service (IRS) has rules,        requiring you to file special forms, when you have a Canadian RRSP.              First, you cannot claim an RRSP deduction on your U.S. 1040 tax return.       Second, interest       and dividends earned inside your RRSP are taxable annually, unless you file a       form 8891 with your U.S. tax return to defer the tax. You must also file form       8938 to declare the value of your RRSP when it reaches a certain size. In       addition, you would        normally need to file form TDF 90-22.1 (FBAR) each year, separately from your       U.S. 1040 tax return.              Onerous penalties apply if you fail to file these forms each year.              Calgary lawyer Roy Berg expects that by July 1, Canada will execute an       intergovernmental agreement with the U.S. to administer the U.S.'s Foreign       Account Tax Compliance Act (FATCA). Many non-tax-compliant U.S. citizens are       "playing ostrich" and purposely        not filing tax returns and the various reporting forms. Basically, FATCA will       impose              U.S. filing obligations on Canadian financial institutions that have U.S.       citizen clients. Therefore, if U.S. citizens living in Canada want to continue       to hold financial accounts such as RRSPs, they will need to comply with the       U.S. tax system.              Terry McBride, a member of Advocis, works with Raymond James Ltd. (RJL). The       views of the author do not necessarily reflect those of Raymond James Ltd.       (RJL). Information is from sources believed reliable but cannot be guaranteed.       This is provided for        information only. Securities offered through Raymond James Ltd., member of the       Canadian Investor Protection Fund. Insurance services offered through        Raymond James Financial Planning Ltd., not a member of the Canadian Investor       Protection Fund.       (c) Copyright (c) The StarPhoenix               -----------------------------------------------------------        Miss a Tax Tale Miss a lot!        Visit the CRA SOTW Library at http://canada.revenue.agency.angelfire.com        ------------------------------------------------------------        Alan Baggett - Tax Collector's Bible - http://taxcollectorsbible.com/              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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