Chapter 4 (September 16th): Using Tax Concepts for Planning (TIED FOR MOST IMPORTANT) Flashcards

1
Q

What are taxes used for

A

government services/programs.

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2
Q

when are taxes paid

A

income earned, consumer purchases, assets and property.

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3
Q

when do tax exemptions apply

A

income earned on a reserve (buy goods on, or delivered to, a reserve)

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4
Q

what is purpose of tax exemption

A

improve living conditions on reserve.

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5
Q

what is purpose of tax exemption

A

improve living conditions on reserve.

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6
Q

First Nation communities on the reserve may often enact their own tax rules.

A
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7
Q

First Nation communities on the reserve may often enact their own tax rules.

A
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8
Q

who is responsible for enforce federal taxes

A

Canadian revenue agency (CRA)

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8
Q

who is responsible for enforce federal taxes

A

Canadian revenue agency (CRA)

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9
Q

taxes imposed on income earned.

A

personal income taxes.

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9
Q

taxes imposed on income earned.

A

personal income taxes.

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10
Q

GST, PST, HST meaning

A

Government Sales tax, provincial sales taxes, HST paid at time of transaction.

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11
Q

Who does not pay GST, HST.

A

First Nations (under Indian act)

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12
Q

special taxes levied on certain products such as cigarettes, alcohol and gasoline.

A

Excise tax (everyone pays)

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13
Q

special taxes levied on certain products such as cigarettes, alcohol and gasoline.

A

Excise tax (everyone pays)

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14
Q

any asset that is acquired and held for the purpose of generating income.

A

Capital Assets

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15
Q

what government body major source of revenue

A

municipal government.

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16
Q

who has the power to reserve property taxes on their own land <— hint

A

First Nations.

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17
Q

who has the power to reserve property taxes on their own land <— hint

A

First Nations.

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18
Q

Do you have to file a tax return?

A

Yes, If
- you have to pay tax for a calendar year.
- you want to claim a refund.
- you want to claim the Canada Workers Benefit (CWB) or you received CWB advance payments in the year.
- you or your spouse or common-law partner want to begin, or continue receiving the Canada child benefit (CCB), GST/HST credit, or Guaranteed Income Supplement (GIS).
- the CRA sent you a request to file a return.
- you owe tax to CRA.
- you and your spouse or common-law partner are jointly electing to split pension income.
- you disposed of capital property or you realized a taxable capital gain in the year.
- you have to repay all or part of your old age security (OAS) or employment insurance (EI) benefits.
- you have not repaid all the amounts you withdrew from your registered retirement savings plan (RRSP) under the Home Buyers’ Plan (HBP) or Lifelong Learning Plan (LLP).
- you have to contribute to the Canada Pension Plan (CPP).
- you are paying employment insurance premiums on self-employment income or other eligible earnings.
- you have incurred a non-capital loss in the year that you want to be able to apply in other years.
- you want to transfer unused tuition fees or carry forward unused tuition, education, and textbook amounts to a future year.
- you want to report income that would allow you to contribute to an RRSP, a pooled registered pension plan (PRPP), or a specified pension plan (SPP).
- you want to carry forward to a future year the unused investment tax credit on expenditures you incurred during the current year.

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19
Q

Government benefits that are payable for periods of time when you are away from work due to specific situations.

A

Employment Insurance(EI):

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20
Q

Government benefits that are payable for periods of time when you are away from work due to specific situations.

A

Employment Insurance(EI):

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21
Q

When does Tax year end.

A

December 31st

22
Q

When must you file a tax return

A

April 30th

23
Q

When must you file a tax return if you are self-employed:

A

June 15th

24
Q

When must you file a tax return if you are self-employed:

A

June 15th (though taxes owed mayst be paid by April 30th)

25
Q

BY what means can you file a tax return

A

Mail and electronically.

26
Q

What programs may students be eligible to get a tax refund from

A

GST/HST: credit (467$) and climate action incentive clan ($373)

26
Q

What programs may students be eligible to get a tax refund from

A

GST/HST: credit (467$) and climate action incentive clan ($373)

27
Q

Late Tax Penalty

A

5% plus 1% every month.

28
Q

What are the steps you must take to fill out a tax return.

A
  1. ID
  2. Calculate Total Income
  3. Calculate Net Income
  4. Calculate Taxable Income
    5: Calculate Federal Tax
    6: Calculate Provincial Tax
    7: Deduct Tax refund
  5. Balance Owing
29
Q

A document provided to you by your employer that shows your salary and all deductions associated with your employment with that specific employer for the previous year.

A

T4 slip.

30
Q

Step: Total Income, what consists of income?

A
  • Employment Income
  • Business Income
  • Property Income (rent)
  • Capital gains/losses (investment value)
  • Other Income (international income)
31
Q

Money earned when you sell an asset at a higher price than you paid for it.

A

Capital gains (capital Loss is the opposite - natives are exempt from taxes)

32
Q

Interest earned from investments in various types of savings accounts at financial institutions; from investments in debt securities such as term deposits, GICs, and CSBs; and from loans to other individuals, companies, and governments.

A

Interest income:

33
Q

A document provided to you when you receive income other than salary income.

A

T5 Statement of Investment Income (slip):

34
Q

income received from corporations in the form of dividends paid on stock or on mutual funds that hold stock.

A

Dividend income:

35
Q

A taxable capital gain is currently equal to __ percent of the capital gain.

A

50 percent.

36
Q

An allowable capital loss is currently equal to __ percent of the capital loss.

A

50 percent.

37
Q

An allowable capital loss is currently equal to __ percent of the capital loss.

A

50 percent.

38
Q

amount remaining after subtracting deductions from your total income.

A

Net income:

39
Q

Deduction:

A

an item that can be deducted from total income to determine taxable income.

40
Q

Deduction:

A

an item that can be deducted from total income to determine taxable income.

41
Q

Types of deductions:

A

RRPP (box 32 - T4)
RSP
UNION/PROFESSIONAL DUES (box 44 - T4)
CHILD CARE EXPENSES
CHILD/SPOUSAL SUPPORT
CARRYING CHARGES
MOVING EXPENSES
EMPLOYMENT EXPENSES

42
Q

Types of deductions:

A

RRPP (box 32 - T4)
RSP
UNION/PROFESSIONAL DUES (box 44 - T4)
CHILD CARE EXPENSES
CHILD/SPOUSAL SUPPORT
CARRYING CHARGES
MOVING EXPENSES
EMPLOYMENT EXPENSES

43
Q

Calculate Taxable Income:

A

Net Income - deductions

44
Q

the percentage of tax you pay on your next dollar of taxable income.

A

marginal tax rate.

45
Q

the amount of tax you pay as a percentage of your total taxable income.

A

Average tax rate:

46
Q

the amount of tax you pay as a percentage of your total taxable income.

A

Average tax rate:

47
Q

specific amounts used directly to reduce tax liability.

A

Tax Credits

48
Q

Refundable tax credit:

A

portion of the credit that is not needed to reduce your tax liability may be paid to you (e.g. GST/HST credit, CWB).

49
Q

portion of the credit that is not needed to reduce your tax liability will not be paid to you and cannot be carried forward to reduce your tax liability in the future.

A

Non-refundable tax credit:

49
Q

portion of the credit that is not needed to reduce your tax liability will not be paid to you and cannot be carried forward to reduce your tax liability in the future.

A

Non-refundable tax credit:

50
Q

Used to reduce a particular government benefit provided to taxpayers who have income that exceeds a certain threshold amount.

A

Clawback

51
Q

the general base amount for anon refundable tax credit multiplied by the lowest marginal tax bracket.

A

therefore, tax deductions are more valuable than tax credits. Cause they deduct from higher.

52
Q

amount of total tax payable is less than the amount of total tax already paid (i.e. if you have already paid too much tax you get some back!)

A

Tax refund.

53
Q

amount of total tax payable is greater than amount of total tax already paid

A

Tax owing