dapaterson said:
That is what the rules appear to say. However, I am not a tax lawyer. But the confusion being generated by Phoenix continues to grow...
So, if it's a taxable benefit, let look at it this way.
Government over pays me $2000 at 0% interest.
The CRA assume that that is a taxable benefit. Had I taken a loan from the bank, I'd pay, lets say, 5%.
Amortize that over the year, compounded monthly, and the total interest owed would be $102.32.
So, the CRA is saying I received a "taxable benefit akin to $102.32 ".
Using the Federal and Provincial tax rates for my income level, that works out to about $38.02 that I would owe the government in taxes.
Ok, so I take the $2000 and invest in in a GIC at 2% and walk away with $2,040.37, earning a net of $2.35. Yay for me.
But GICs are locked it. What if they claw the $2000 back before it reaches annuity?
Ok, so invest in a Mutual Fund instead. Same amount of work, potentially higher rate of return. Oh wait, you picked the wrong one and you actually just lost money.
I can't believe they would expect the average joe to go through all this over a few dollars taxes.
Even if they accidentally
doubled my salary, it works out to roughly $2000 in taxes.
Hurrah for the small guy.