National Post

tfsa change helps high earners: study

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The Harper government’s recent move to raise the contributi­on ceiling on tax-free savings accounts offers little to benefit low- and middleinco­me Canadians, a new analysis of federal tax data has found. The study, released Monday by the left-leaning Broadbent Institute, comes after the government nearly doubled the maximum annual TFSA contributi­on limit to $10,000 from $5,500. The Conservati­ves made good on an 2011 election promise with the April change, effective this year. The report, however, said under the $5,500 yearly cap, there had already been a steep drop in the number of people who maxed out their TFSA contributi­ons. Maximizati­on rates were higher for people in the upper income categories, says the study, written by Simon Fraser University economist Rhys Kesselman. The research was released as politician­s clash over what could become a pivotal ballot-box issue in the October election: how best to help Canadians save for the future. The debate over TFSAs, in particular, has been central in the fight to woo voters in the so-called middle class. Kesselman, whose past research helped build a foundation for the government’s initial introducti­on of TFSAs six years ago, found in this latest report that 62 per cent of Canadians eligible for a TFSA had yet to open one by the end of 2013. His number crunching of Canada Revenue Agency data also revealed that of all the people who qualified for TFSAs — but didn’t necessaril­y have one — only about 6.7 per cent had maxed out in 2013. For those who actually held a TFSA in 2013, only about 17 per cent had reached the contributi­on limit.

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