Taxation 1
Lecture 1
Sources of Tax law
o Statute Law – Income Tax Act (Canada) (the “Act)
Lengthy and complex
o Common Law – “Case Law”
Primary source of definitions and interpretation
o International Tax Conventions
Avoid incidence of double taxation
Tax treaties take precedence over the Act
ITA Section 3 – Income for taxation year
Who develops Tax Law
o Department of Finance
Develops income tax law
o Canada Revenue Agency
Assess and collects tax
Interpretation of tax law may conflict with intentions of drafters
CRA’s interpretations are made public through Income Tax Folios (a technical
publication that has replaced Interpretation Bulletins)
CRA’s interpretations are not law
Determination of Income
o Framework
Each entity subject to income tax determines its taxable income on the basis of a
taxation year
Income for each entity is based on the world-wide income generated for five
categories
Net Income for each of the five categories are aggregated
The sum is referred to as “net income for tax purposes”
Net income for tax purposes is reduced by a limited number of specific items
Taxable income = Net income –specific deductions
Taxation Year
o Defined differently for corporations and individuals [ITA 249]
o Corporations
Any time period not exceeding 53 weeks (12 months) [ITA249.1]
May be less than 12 months (e.g., when corporation is formed or ceases to exist)
Exception for Professional corporations –December 31 taxation year-end
o Individuals
December 31 of every year [ITA 249(1)
Categories of Income
o An entity’s word income is derived from five basic sources [ITA 3]:
Employment income
Business income
Property income
Capital gains and losses
Other specific sources
Includes superannuation and pension receipts (including OAS and CPP
benefits), EI benefits, alimony payments, receipts from RRSPs and
deferred profit-sharing plans
Net Income for Tax Purposes – The Aggregating Formula
o Must follow a basic accumulating formula [ITA 3]
o Same formula is used by individuals and corporations
o See Exhibit 3-4 in Buckwold/Kitunen text
TAXABLE capital gains are 50% of capital gains (only divide when it says
capital)
ALLOWABLE capital losses are 50% of capital losses
Capital losses are only subtracted from gains not from total income
It can be carried forward to the next fiscal year
Taxable Income
o Net income for tax purposes is reduced by limited number of specified Division C
reductions to arrive at taxable income [ITA 110 to 116]
o Reductions applicable to individuals
Unused losses of other years
Employee stock option deduction
Capital gains deduction on certain property
o Reductions applicable to corporations
Donations
Unused losses of other years
Dividends from Canadian corporations
Dividends from foreign affiliates
Income from Employment
o Definition
Not specifically defined in the Act
When the relationship is not clear, the courts have considered four factors
Control test (teachers opinion=most important to determine the outcome)
Ownership of tools test
Chance of profit or loss test
Integration test
Employment Income – Fundamental Rules
o ITA 5(1) - All formal compensation income, with exceptions, are taxable when received
o ITA 6(1)(a) -All benefits, with exceptions, are taxable when received
o ITA 6(1)(b) -All allowances, with exceptions, are taxable
o ITA 8(2) -All deductions are disallowed
unless they are specifically allowed in the Act
Cash Basis
o First fundamental rule -inclusion of formal compensation arrangements:
Salary, wages and commissions [ITA 5(1)]
Gratuities [ITA 5(1)]
Bonuses [ITA 5(1)]
Honoraria [ITA 6(1)]
Director’s fees [ITA 6(1)(c)]
o Included on a cash basis
When received, not necessarily when earned
Taxable Benefits
o Common forms of taxable benefits [ITA 6(1)(a)]:
Rent-free or low-rent housing
Gifts in cash or in kind
Non-cash gifts and non-cash awards with a total value < $500 can be
excluded from income annually
Group term life insurance policies
Holiday trips, prizes, and incentive awards in recognition of job performance
Interest-free or low-interest loans
Club dues when membership in the club provides little or no advantage to the
employer’s business
Public transit is taxable
Non- Taxable and Tax-deferred benefits
o Employer contributions to certain specific benefits are excluded on a deferred or
permanent basis [ITA 6(1)(a)(i) to (v))]
Employer contributions to a deferred profit-sharing program (“DPSP”), a group
sickness or accident insurance plan, a pooled registered pension plan (“PRPP”), a
private (not public) health services plan, a registered pension plan (“RPP”) or
supplementary unemployment plan
Counselling services relating to the mental or physical health (including family
members) or to the re-employment or retirement of the employee
When an employer provides scholarships, bursaries, and free tuition for post-
secondary education to family members of employees to assist them to further
their education.
Tax Exempt Benefits
o Arbitrary non-taxable benefits include [CRA T4130 Guide]:
Discounts on merchandise
Subsidized meals
Child care –if provided at workplace, managed by the employer, and provided to
all employees at minimal or no cost
Uniforms and special clothing
In house recreational facilities
Club dues, where it is clearly to the employer’s advantage to be a member of the
club
Internet at home –providing primary benefit is to the employer
Cell phones and computers –primarily for business purpose
Tuition/Training costs reimbursed –if course primarily benefits the employer
Taxable Benefits – Automobiles
o To the extent automobile is for personal use, a taxable benefit arises
o There are two components:
Standby charge [ITA 6(1)(e), 6(2)] AND
Operating cost benefit [ITA 6(1)(k), 6(1)(l)]
o See Handout
Employee Loans
o The benefit an employee’s receives from a low interest loan is a taxable benefit [ITA
6(9)]
o Taxable benefit is the difference between the prescribed rate of interest and the actual
interest paid [ITA 80.4]
o See Handout
Relocation Expenses
o Generally reimbursement of moving expense are not taxable
o Reimbursement of two specific types of relocation expenses are taxable:
ITA 6(1)(a) / 6(23) - Reimbursement of costs to finance a residence is taxable
ITA 6(1)(a)/6(19)-(21) - Reimbursement of loss on sale of home:
First $15,000 - not taxable, but
one-half of any amount above $15,000 is taxable
Allowances
o All allowances are taxable, subject to specific exceptions [ITA 6(1)(b)]
o Only three of the exceptions have broad application:
ITA 6(1)(b)(v) - Employees selling property or negotiating contracts
ITA 6(1)(b)(vii) - Employees other than salespeople
CRA Employer Guide – Overtime meals and allowances
Employees selling property or negotiating contracts
o Entitled to a non-taxable allowance for travel expenses include transportation, car, meals,
lodging, and other incidental costs.
o The allowance must be reasonable:
if unreasonably high or low in relation to the actual costs incurred, the allowance
is taxable.
o Tax-free allowances are not always beneficial.
Employees Other than Salespeople
o Also entitled to receive a tax-free allowance for travel expenses.
Travel allowance that does not relate to the use of an automobile is considered
tax-free only if:
The allowance is a reasonable amount; and,
The employee travels outside the municipality or metropolitan area in
which the employer is located.
Reasonable Travel Allowance
o Automobile allowances are considered tax-free if:
The allowance is for the purpose of travelling in the performance of their duties
as employees; and,
The allowance is reasonable and
based solely on the number of kilometres used to conduct employment
duties.
CRA’s new administrative policy is to consider a per kilometre allowance of
$0.59 for the first 5,000 kilometres and $0.53 for the remainder (2021) as a
guideline for reasonableness.
Overtime Meals and Allowances
o Reasonable overtime meal allowances are not taxable if:
Employee works two or more hours of overtime right after scheduled hours.
The overtime is infrequent and occasional (less than three times a week).
Up to $23 per meal will generally be considered reasonable
o Otherwise, the allowance is a taxable benefit.
Stock Options
o Categories of Stock Options
In-The-Money Options: Stock options of public companies with an option price
below FMV at the date the option is granted
Not-In-The-Money Options: Stock options of public companies with an option
price equal to or greater than the FMV at the date the option is granted
Stock options of a CCPC
o See Handout