Источник The Globe and Mail.com, Toronto, Canada
Заголовок How can this 81-year-old minimize taxes and ensure her heirs get as much of her estate as possible? Plus, why there’s still a life expectancy gap between men and women
Дата 20241114

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How can this 81-year-old minimize taxes and ensure her heirs get as much of her
estate as possible? Plus, why there’s still a life expectancy gap between men and
women

How can this 81-year-old minimize taxes and ensure her heirs get as much of
her estate as possible? Plus, why there’s still a life expectancy gap between
men and women

Special to The Globe and Mail

Published 30 minutes ago

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To save on estate tax, Linda wants to know if she should withdraw more than
the annual minimum from her RRIF now even if it means more of her Old Age
Security benefit will be clawed back. Laura Proctor/The Globe and Mail

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Linda is 81 years old, a recent widow who is well-fixed financially. She has a
mortgage-free house in the Greater Toronto Area, two children and four
grandchildren. “I have plenty of income to last me until I die,” Linda writes
in an e-mail• Коммуникации » Интернет-коммуникации » Электронная почта, but she would like to keep the taxes she pays on her estate to a
minimum.

In addition to her government benefits of $24,100 a year, Linda has a defined
benefit pension that pays $22,520 a year, not indexed to inflation. She draws
the minimum from her registered retirement income fund (RRIF) each year,
bringing her total income before tax to about $98,000 a year. At that level, a
portion of her OAS would be clawed back.

“I want to minimize the income tax that will be deducted from my RRIF,
allowing me to leave as much as possible to my heirs,” Linda writes.

Linda lives modestly, spending about $50,000 a year.

Her question: To save on estate tax, should she withdraw more than the annual
minimum from her RRIF now even if it means more of her Old Age Security
benefit will be clawed back?

In this Financial Facelift , Warren MacKenzie, an independent financial
planner in Toronto, looks at Linda’s situation. Mr. MacKenzie holds the
chartered professional accountant designation.

Millennials pay higher taxes for boomers’ retirement – and the burden is only
going to increase

The income taxes paid by Canadian millennials are being squeezed by population
aging, writes Paul Kershaw in this personal finance article. The typical
35-year-old now pays approximately 20-per-cent to 40-per-cent more for
boomers’ healthy retirements than boomers paid as young people to support the
smaller number of seniors in their day.

This extra tax burden will only get heavier in the years ahead as Ottawa
enacts planned increases for Old Age Security (OAS) and the Canada Health
Transfer, and provinces increase medical spending for their aging populations.

It is time to admit that Canada’s plans for population aging run afoul of the
“intergenerational golden rule.” As Statistic Canada’s former assistant chief
statistician, Michael Wolfson, famously wrote: “One generation, when it
becomes old and frail, should not expect to be treated any better by its
children than it treated its parents’ generation in their old age.”

Unfortunately, this is exactly what is now expected of Gen X, millennials and
Gen Z – because governments decades ago didn’t plan adequately for boomers’
retirement.

We can estimate how much bigger young people’s tax burden is by examining
federal and provincial income taxes owed by 35-year-olds in 2022 (the most
recent data) compared with 1976. I use Statistics Canada’s Social Policy
Simulation Database to calculate taxes paid by individuals with identical
incomes in both eras, after adjusting for inflation. (Full results are
available on the Generation Squeeze website.)

Read the full article here .

Dr. Paul Kershaw is a policy professor at the University of British Columbia
and the founder of Generation Squeeze, Canada’s leading voice for generational
fairness. He offers policy advice to governments of all party stripes,
including the current federal cabinet.

Why is there still a life expectancy gap of more than four years between men
and women
today?

In this Charting Retirement , Frederick Vettese, former chief actuary of
Morneau Shepell and author of the PERC retirement calculator ( perc-pro.ca ),
looks at the life expectancy gap between men and women in Canada.

In case you missed it

Three underutilized and tax-effective ways for wealthy clients to donate

Most clients pick a loved one or their estate as the beneficiary for their
investments, writes Globe Advisor reporter Deanne Gage but, she adds, fewer
consider a registered charity.

Designating a charity as a beneficiary can be tax-efficient, especially for
wealthy clients who don’t need the money and feel their heirs already have
sufficient assets, says Alexandra Spinner, chartered professional accountant
and partner in the tax and estate planning group at Crowe Soberman LLP in
Toronto.

Read more about these underutilized and tax-effective charitable giving
strategies – registered accounts, life insurance• Страхование policies and donor-advised
funds – here .

Why modelling decumulation products for clients is so challenging

The market for decumulation products in Canada has picked up in recent years,
writes Jason Pereira, a senior partner and financial planner at Woodgate
Financial in Toronto. But while advisors don’t lack options – with products
such as tontines , guaranteed minimum withdrawal benefits (GMWBs) and advanced
life deferred annuities (ALDAs) available – we lack frameworks for
decision-making and product allocation to optimize client outcomes.

The inability to enter the variables of assets, age, gender, market return and
volatility, risk• Страхование » Риск tolerance, desired income and other factors into financial
planning software and receive an answer that gives clients their best possible
combination of products is a major hindrance.

To date, the available products’ novelty, the lack of solid allocation
frameworks, the behavioural factors and compensation differentials – combined
with a general lack of appreciation of the challenges and mathematics of
decumulation – have contributed to low adoption.

Given these limitations, how can an advisor utilize what’s available to help
their clients?

Read the full article here .

This is the fourth and final article in a series examining the decumulation
product landscape in Canada and how advisors can explain the options to
clients. Read Part 1 here , Part 2 here and Part 3 here .

Retirement Q & A

Last week’s newsletter featured a Q & A regarding snowbirds and the
definition of stability and travel insurance, which prompted more snowbird
curiosity. This week, were looking at whether it’s worth it to travel back
and forth to Canada toreset” your travel medical insurance• Страхование.

Q: My husband and I are snowbirds and a friend recently told us that we can
save money on travel insurance by flying back to Canada for a short period of
time (i.e. a day or even a couple of hours) toresetour travel insurance
coverage and then flying back to our winter destination. Is this true?

We asked Stephen Fine, president, Snowbird Advisor, to answer this one.

A: Your friend is likely referring to snowbirds who have multitrip annual
travel medical insurance• Страхование coverage and travel back and forth to Canada for
short periods over the winter for the sole purpose of “resetting” their
coverage.

While this may make sense for some, it rarely makes sense when you look at the
cost, inconvenience and possible risks of travelling back and forth compared
with simply purchasing top-up coverage and staying in your winter destination.

What’s the logic behind travelling back and forth? Multitrip plans provide
emergency medical coverage for an unlimited number of trips over a 12-month
period. However, annual plans also limit the number of days you are allowed to
travel per tripfor example, 30 days, 60 days, 90 days, etc. Once you reach
your limit, you must return to your home province before travelling again to
reset” the clock on your coverage (unless you purchase “top-up” coverage –
see below).

As a result, some snowbirds with multitrip travel insurance plans fly back to
Canada for very brief periods for the exclusive purpose of resetting their
per-trip coverage period. By doing this, they believe they are saving money by
not having to buy additional travel insurance coverage, and in some cases they
are. However, in many cases, they would actually be better off simply staying
in their winter destination and purchasing what is known astop-up” coverage
for their existing multitrip plan, as outlined below.

Top-up coverage allows you to add extra days of coverage to a trip under your
multitrip plan if that trip is going to be longer than the maximum per-trip
limit allowed by your multitrip plan. For example, let’s say you have a
multitrip plan that allows you to travel for 30 days per trip, but you want to
be away for 59 days on a particular trip. In this situation, you would
purchase a 29-day top-up plan for that trip to cover you for the period beyond
your policy’s 30-day per-trip limit (It’s important to note that if you
already have a “cause for claim” under your original travel insurance policy,
you likely won’t be eligible to purchase top-up coverage).

Some travellers are under the impression that top-up coverage is much more
expensive than the cost of round-trip airline tickets (and other related
travel expenses), however, in many cases top-up coverage can be less
expensive, equally expensive, or only slightly more expensive. Plus, youll
have the added benefit of not dealing with the hassle and inconvenience of
flying back and forth.

While it usually isn’t worthwhile to travel back and forth to reset your
travel insurance, there may be some scenarios where it makes sense
financially.

Watch out for changes to your health or medical conditions. If you are
thinking about returning to Canada to reset the clock on your multitrip plan,
an important risk• Страхование » Риск you need to be aware of is that changes to your health and
medical conditions may negatively affect your coverage.

Travel medical insurance• Страхование policies cover you based on your health and medical
conditions at the time you leave your home province or territory. If you
return to Canada and there have been any changes in your health or medical
conditions – either while you are away or while you are back in Canada, no
matter how briefly – you would need to contact your travel insurance provider
to inform them of the changes, which could negatively affect your insurance• Страхование
coverage in a number of ways, including premium increases, exclusion of
certain conditions from coverage and, in some cases, being declared ineligible
for coverage.

You can learn more about flying back and forth to Canada to reset your travel
insurance
coverage here.

Have a question about money or lifestyle topics for seniors? E-mail• Коммуникации » Интернет-коммуникации » Электронная почта us at
sixtyfive@globeandmail.com and we will find experts and answer your questions
in future newsletters. Interested in more stories about retirement? Sixty Five
aims to inspire Canadians to live their best lives, confidently and securely.
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