National Post

Liberal tax hikes are set to cause problems for charitable giving.

- Jami e Golombek Tax Expert Financial Post Jamie. Golombek@ cibc. com Jamie Golombek, CPA, CA, CFP, CLU, TEP is the Managing Director, Tax & Estate Planning with CIBC Wealth Advisory Services in Toronto.

December is typically the biggest month for charitable giving, with about 60 per cent of Canadian adults expected to donate approximat­ely $5 billion between now and the end of the year, according to Imagine Canada, a national charitable organizati­on whose cause is supporting Canada’s charities.

Statistics Canada says that Canadians give just under $13 billion annually to charities and non- profits, meaning that approximat­ely 40 per cent of all donations take place in the last six weeks of the year. Why do people give? Statistics Canada identifies “compassion for those in need” as the top reason Canadians donate ( 89 per cent), followed by “personally believe in a cause” (85 per cent) and “contribute to our communitie­s” (79 per cent). Six-in-10 (61 per cent) are motivated by being personally affected by the cause.

To encourage individual­s to give, there are tax benefits in the form of federal and provincial non-refundable tax credits. On the federal side, you get a credit of 15 per cent for the first $200 of annual charitable donations. The federal credit rate jumps to 29 per cent for cumulative donations above $200. These rates are equal to the tax rates of the lowest federal bracket (income below about $45,000) and the highest bracket (income above approximat­ely $139,000) respective­ly. Parallel provincial credits work similarly.

The Liberal election platform called for an increase in the top federal personal income tax rate from 29 per cent to 33 per cent, for taxable income exceeding $200,000. This proposal could be introduced as early as this week, once Parliament reconvenes, and will likely be effective Jan. 1, 2016.

The increase in the top tax rate, however, begs the question as to whether the federal charitable donation credit for donations above $200 per year will also rise to 33 per cent.

The Income Tax Act states that the donation credit rate for amounts over $ 200 in a given year “is the highest percentage … that applies in determinin­g tax that might be payable … for the year.” The policy question is whether, once the top tax rate is increased, this rule will be maintained.

Toronto tax lawyer and author David Sherman has raised the issue with the Department of Finance and said that if the government doesn’t want to give a 33 per cent credit to donors when most Canadians are in the 15 per cent, lowest, federal bracket, then perhaps the government would consider introducin­g a second annual donation threshold, such as $ 5,000 or $ 10,000, so that total donations exceeding that threshold would be eligible for the new 33 per cent federal credit. As Sherman explains, “This would allow major donors to continue to obtain the high rate once they exceed that threshold. In practice, most people donating more than $5,000 or $10,000 have high incomes.”

A few years back, when the Ontario government added new, higher tax rates for high-income earners, it didn’t adjust its provincial donation credits such that there is currently a mismatch in that the current top combined federal/ Ontario tax rate is about 49.5 per cent while the combined federal/Ontario donation credit is about 46.4 per cent. If the federal government doesn’t adjust the rate, according to Sherman, “there will be a serious mismatch and a disincenti­ve to charitable giving (since) in Ontario … income will be taxed at 53.5 per cent while the credit will be only 46.4 per cent. Someone who chooses to earn an extra $10,000 to give it all to charity will pay about an eight per cent tax for doing so.”

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