The Federal budget of June 6, 2011, announced a new hiring credit designed to alleviate the burden on small businesses trying to expand their payroll. Those businesses paying $10,000 or less in EI premiums in 2011 will see any additional hiring and accompanying premiums credited back up to $1,000. This means any business with a payroll of around $400,000 or less could add an employee in 2011 and suffer no extra EI premium on the first $1,000.
Of further help is the Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) will automatically credit back the money upon the 2012 T4 tax return being filed. No need to keep track of new employees either, since the credit is based on the increase in the employer's 2011 premiums over those paid for 2010.
Here we will provide you with some great insight into the financial world, offering tips and advice, and creating an open forum for questions and discussion. Visit often, as information will be regularly updated.
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- Cope, Barrett and Co
- Belleville, Picton, Bancroft, Ontario, Canada
- We are a team of professional accountants with knowledge and experience in public practice, manufacturing, education and management. We are committed to excellence and quality in all of our client services. We value the relationship that we build with our clientele.
Wednesday, 16 November 2011
Monday, 14 November 2011
Upcoming Changes to our Canada Pension Plan Beginning 2012 ...
At the beginning of 2012 changes will be made to the Canada Pension Plan which may affect Canadians who are both retired and currently receiving CPP retirement benefits and those who are contemplating retirement in the near future.
While the number of Canadians who could be affected by these changes is in the hundreds of thousands, there are some who don’t need to consider them. Canadians who have already retired and are receiving Canada Pension Plan benefits, but are either already age 70 or older, or have no plans to return to the work force, on either a part-time or full-time basis, can safely ignore these changes.
For most of the rest of us, some choices may have to be made, as follows.
Under current rules, it’s possible to choose to begin receiving CPP retirement benefits at any time between the ages of 60 and 70. However, once benefits start being paid, the recipient, even if he or she returns to the work force on a part-time or full-time basis, cannot contribute again to the Canada Pension Plan. As well, for Canadians less than 65 years of age, it is necessary, in order to begin receiving CPP retirement benefits, to be out of the work force, or to have significantly diminished earnings, for two months before benefits start. Both those rules are about to change.
The simplest change is the fact that it will be possible, as of January 1, 2012, to begin receiving CPP retirement benefits without any interruption in one’s working life. Where an individual chooses to stay in the work force while also receiving CPP benefits, it’s often the case that the choice is made from financial necessity. In such cases, a two-month interruption in earnings can impose a real hardship. That will no longer be the case.
The second change is that those who stay in the work force, or decide after retirement to return to the work force may, beginning January 1, 2012, also return to making CPP contributions. Where an individual who is between the ages of 60 and 65 and receiving CPP retirement benefits returns to the paid work force, he or she will be required to resume making CPP contributions—there is no choice in the matter. Where that individual is between the ages of 65 and 70, he or she will be able to choose whether or not to resume making such contributions. The decision is the employee’s, but the contributions will automatically be deducted from the employee’s pay, beginning January 1, 2012, unless he or she provides the employer with a signed Form CPT30, Election to Stop Contributing to the Canada Pension Plan, by the end of December 2011. That form is now available on the Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) Web site at http://www.cra-arc.gc.ca/E/pbg/tf/cpt30/cpt30-11e.pdf. Once completed and submitted to an employer, the form is effective as of the beginning of the following month, so the CRA Web site includes a reminder that it should not be completed or submitted until after November 30, 2011. As well, an employee who has signed and completed such a form and later has a change of heart can revoke the election, and once again start making CPP contributions, beginning in 2013.
One of the biggest decisions to make with respect to Canada Pension Plan retirement benefits is when to begin claiming and receiving such benefits. A lot of factors go into that decision—whether or not you are still in the workforce and how long you are planning to keep working, what other sources of income (i.e., private pension income, or annuity payments) are available, whether additional income is needed to meet current living costs, even one’s current state of health and family longevity history, etc. One of the biggest factors to consider, however, is the fact that the amount of pension received will depend on when one decides to start receiving it. And, the changes which are taking effect between 2011 and 2016 will make this a greater factor than it has been previously.
Before the changes, a CPP retirement pension was increased by 0.5% for each month after age 65 that the recipient delayed receiving it. Similarly, the amount receivable was decreased by 0.5% for each month before the age of 65 that recipient accelerated receiving it. For those who defer receipt, the monthly percentage increase will go from 0.6% in 2011 to 0.7% in 2013. That doesn’t sound like much, but it means that, by 2013, someone who defers receipt of their CPP pension until age 70, will receive a monthly pension amount which is 42% higher than it would have been if the same person had chosen to begin receiving that pension at age 65. The consequences are similar for those who choose to begin receiving CPP “early”. The reduction percentage will rise from 0.5% to 0.6% between 2012 and 2016. In practical terms, that means that someone who begins receiving their CPP pension in 2016 at the age of 60 will receive benefits that are 36% lower than they would have been if they had waited until age 65.
There is, of course, no right or wrong answer to the question of when it’s best to begin receiving CPP benefits, and certainly no “one size fits all” answer. In some cases, financial need may compel a person to begin receiving benefits at the earliest possible opportunity, regardless of the effect such a claim may have on the amount of those benefits. Others, who don’t necessarily need a CPP cheque to pay basic living expenses may nonetheless decide that they are willing to accept a lesser amount in order to have earlier access to those benefits and to use them to carry out —travel plans, for instance—which may not be as easy to accomplish later in life. Still others may decide to start using private retirement savings, like an RRSP, or begin receiving an employer-sponsored pension, while deferring receipt of CPP as long as possible. Whether any of these is the best course of action depends entirely on the individual’s circumstances (especially his or her financial circumstances) and their current and planned retirement lifestyle.
While the number of Canadians who could be affected by these changes is in the hundreds of thousands, there are some who don’t need to consider them. Canadians who have already retired and are receiving Canada Pension Plan benefits, but are either already age 70 or older, or have no plans to return to the work force, on either a part-time or full-time basis, can safely ignore these changes.
For most of the rest of us, some choices may have to be made, as follows.
Under current rules, it’s possible to choose to begin receiving CPP retirement benefits at any time between the ages of 60 and 70. However, once benefits start being paid, the recipient, even if he or she returns to the work force on a part-time or full-time basis, cannot contribute again to the Canada Pension Plan. As well, for Canadians less than 65 years of age, it is necessary, in order to begin receiving CPP retirement benefits, to be out of the work force, or to have significantly diminished earnings, for two months before benefits start. Both those rules are about to change.
The simplest change is the fact that it will be possible, as of January 1, 2012, to begin receiving CPP retirement benefits without any interruption in one’s working life. Where an individual chooses to stay in the work force while also receiving CPP benefits, it’s often the case that the choice is made from financial necessity. In such cases, a two-month interruption in earnings can impose a real hardship. That will no longer be the case.
The second change is that those who stay in the work force, or decide after retirement to return to the work force may, beginning January 1, 2012, also return to making CPP contributions. Where an individual who is between the ages of 60 and 65 and receiving CPP retirement benefits returns to the paid work force, he or she will be required to resume making CPP contributions—there is no choice in the matter. Where that individual is between the ages of 65 and 70, he or she will be able to choose whether or not to resume making such contributions. The decision is the employee’s, but the contributions will automatically be deducted from the employee’s pay, beginning January 1, 2012, unless he or she provides the employer with a signed Form CPT30, Election to Stop Contributing to the Canada Pension Plan, by the end of December 2011. That form is now available on the Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) Web site at http://www.cra-arc.gc.ca/E/pbg/tf/cpt30/cpt30-11e.pdf. Once completed and submitted to an employer, the form is effective as of the beginning of the following month, so the CRA Web site includes a reminder that it should not be completed or submitted until after November 30, 2011. As well, an employee who has signed and completed such a form and later has a change of heart can revoke the election, and once again start making CPP contributions, beginning in 2013.
One of the biggest decisions to make with respect to Canada Pension Plan retirement benefits is when to begin claiming and receiving such benefits. A lot of factors go into that decision—whether or not you are still in the workforce and how long you are planning to keep working, what other sources of income (i.e., private pension income, or annuity payments) are available, whether additional income is needed to meet current living costs, even one’s current state of health and family longevity history, etc. One of the biggest factors to consider, however, is the fact that the amount of pension received will depend on when one decides to start receiving it. And, the changes which are taking effect between 2011 and 2016 will make this a greater factor than it has been previously.
Before the changes, a CPP retirement pension was increased by 0.5% for each month after age 65 that the recipient delayed receiving it. Similarly, the amount receivable was decreased by 0.5% for each month before the age of 65 that recipient accelerated receiving it. For those who defer receipt, the monthly percentage increase will go from 0.6% in 2011 to 0.7% in 2013. That doesn’t sound like much, but it means that, by 2013, someone who defers receipt of their CPP pension until age 70, will receive a monthly pension amount which is 42% higher than it would have been if the same person had chosen to begin receiving that pension at age 65. The consequences are similar for those who choose to begin receiving CPP “early”. The reduction percentage will rise from 0.5% to 0.6% between 2012 and 2016. In practical terms, that means that someone who begins receiving their CPP pension in 2016 at the age of 60 will receive benefits that are 36% lower than they would have been if they had waited until age 65.
There is, of course, no right or wrong answer to the question of when it’s best to begin receiving CPP benefits, and certainly no “one size fits all” answer. In some cases, financial need may compel a person to begin receiving benefits at the earliest possible opportunity, regardless of the effect such a claim may have on the amount of those benefits. Others, who don’t necessarily need a CPP cheque to pay basic living expenses may nonetheless decide that they are willing to accept a lesser amount in order to have earlier access to those benefits and to use them to carry out —travel plans, for instance—which may not be as easy to accomplish later in life. Still others may decide to start using private retirement savings, like an RRSP, or begin receiving an employer-sponsored pension, while deferring receipt of CPP as long as possible. Whether any of these is the best course of action depends entirely on the individual’s circumstances (especially his or her financial circumstances) and their current and planned retirement lifestyle.
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