For most
people, a Registered Retirement Savings Plan (RRSP)
is the best way to accumulate funds for retirement.
An RRSP lets you save taxes at the same time. Not only
is the amount invested each year sheltered from taxation,
but earnings on assets in the fund are not subject to
tax. The tax–free compounding will make a huge
difference in the amount of money you’ll be able
to save for retirement.
Comparing
RRSPs and Non–Registered Investments
There is
a growing belief that the new dividend tax credit system
and a possible deferral of capital gains (as long as
those gains are reinvested within six months) make RRSPs
obsolete as tax shelters. This belief is not correct.
The new tax rules, if adopted, will alter the relative
tax advantages of investing inside vs. outside of an
RRSP, but they will not eliminate the need for an RRSP
as a tax shelter. An RRSP has advantages beyond the
tax shelter aspect, including serving as a vehicle for
creating a dedicated, conscious plan to provide retirement
income in the future.
Because fewer
and fewer people have company pension plans, the tax
sheltering is so attractive, and sizeable contributions
can be made (up to $18,000 in 2006), millions of dollars
are invested in RRSPs each year.
Options
at Retirement
Some people
start taking distributions from their pension plans
immediately upon retirement. Others defer payments as
long as possible. They like to continue taking advantage
of the income tax–deferred growth accorded such
funds. Further, they may defer payments because they
regard a pension account as a financial reserve, to
be tapped only when needed.
Distributions,
however, cannot be delayed beyond age 69. By that time
you must convert the RRSP to either a retirement annuity
or a Registered Retirement Income Fund (RRIF.)
An annuity
offers the advantages of guaranteed payments and freedom
from worry about how funds should be invested; however,
on death no residual is included in your estate.
The RRIF
is more flexible. You can control how the money is invested,
and you can withdraw any amount each year so long as
you withdraw at least the minimum specified by the Canada
Revenue Agency. And usually, some of the RRIF will be
left in your estate on your death.
Charitable
Gifts Using Retirement Funds
If a spouse
survives you, he or she would ordinarily be the beneficiary
of your retirement funds. If you had an RRSP, your surviving
spouse could keep the funds in a tax–deferred
plan. If you had already converted to a RRIF, your surviving
spouse could continue to receive payments, and they
would be taxed only as received. If you had opted for
a joint-and-survivor annuity for you and your spouse,
he or she will receive payments for the balance of his
or her life.
In the event
that minor children survive you, the retirement funds
can be rolled tax–free into an annuity paying
them installments until age 18. If the dependant is
disabled (whether under or over age 18), a tax–free
rollover to an RRSP, annuity or RRIF is permitted.
Possibly,
however, you will not be survived by a spouse and have
already made arrangements for the children. In that
case, leftover retirement funds make an excellent charitable
gift because the charitable tax credit will offset the
tax on the distribution. Leaving the funds to a beneficiary
who is not a spouse or dependant child or grandchild
generally would cause the full value of the funds to
be taxed in the year of your death. With the charitable
gift you preserve the funds intact for your parish,
the Diocese of Edmonton, or the Anglican Church of Canada.
The recommended
procedure is to designate the Church as beneficiary
of all or a portion of your RRSP and RRIF funds.
Example:
Barbara T, a single woman, dies at age 75 and leaves
$30,000 of her RRIF funds to the Diocese of Edmonton.
Tax on RRIF
funds (39% combined rate) $11,700
Tax credit
(Combined credit is 41.75% of
gift and
entire bequest is creditable.) 12,525
The tax credit
will entirely offset the tax on the distributions because
the creditable amount of a charitable bequest is 100
percent of net income in the year of death. Thus, if
you choose to leave your leftover retirement funds for
the Church, no part of the funds will be consumed by
taxation.
Retirement
Funds and Giving
A charitable
gift is one method of assuring that all, or most, of
the funds you spent a lifetime accumulating are used
for the purposes you choose.
If you would
like more information, in confidence and without obligation,
please complete and return the Request
for Planned Giving Information form.