Finance Minister Jim Flaherty delivered the Federal Budget on
March 4, 2010. The Budget leaves untouched previously-enacted
reductions in corporate income tax rates through 2012. The Budget
proposes a number of narrowly-targeted measures in discrete areas
including, among other things, employee stock options, the
definition of "taxable Canadian property", disclosure of
tax avoidance transactions, the purchase of losses in connection
with income trust conversions and certain foreign tax credit
transactions. The Budget also promises revised proposals dealing
with foreign investment entities and non-resident trusts.
Highlights of these measures are provided below.
Employee Stock Options
Stock Option Cash-Outs
Upon the exercise or disposition of an employee stock option, a
Canadian resident employee is generally required to include in
income an employment benefit. Where the necessary conditions are
satisfied, the employee is entitled to a deduction equal to
one-half of such employment benefit (the "50%
Deduction").
The Budget proposes that where an employer makes a cash payment on
the cash-out of an employee's stock options, the employee will
no longer be entitled to claim the 50% Deduction (assuming that the
employee otherwise qualifies) unless the employer makes an election
to not claim a deduction in respect of the cash-out payment.
Elimination of Deferral Election
As noted above, where an employee exercises a stock option to
acquire shares, the employee is generally taxed on the employment
benefit at the time of such exercise. In certain circumstances, an
employee who on exercise of the option acquires shares listed on a
stock exchange may jointly elect with his or her employer to defer
recognition of the employment benefit from the time of exercise to
the time the share is disposed of.
The Budget papers state that when an employee makes the deferral
election, the employee may not be able to meet his or her tax
obligation where there is a subsequent decrease in the value of the
shares. For this reason, the Budget proposes to remove the ability
to make the deferral election in respect of stock options issued
after 4:00 p.m. (EST) on March 4, 2010.
For employees that previously made a tax deferral election, the
Budget proposes special elective tax relief which is intended to
provide that the tax liability on the deferred stock option benefit
does not exceed the proceeds of disposition of the shares acquired
on the exercise of the stock options.
Withholding & Remittance on the Exercise of Stock
Options
The Budget includes proposals effective after 2010 that ensure the
withholding and remittance obligations for ordinary employment
compensation also applies to the employment benefit in respect of
the exercise of stock options to acquire shares (other than, in
certain circumstances, stock options issued by Canadian controlled
private corporations). Accordingly, the required remittance will
have to be made for the period that includes the date on which the
stock options are exercised.
Taxable Canadian Property
Non-residents of Canada are liable to Canadian taxation on gains
from the disposition of "taxable Canadian property"
(TCP), including shares of private corporations resident in Canada,
whether or not their value is derived from Canadian real property.
In addition, the withholding and certification rules in section 116
of the Income Tax Act (Canada) are applicable to a
disposition by a non-resident of TCP (other than certain excluded
property).
The Budget proposes that the definition of TCP be amended,
effective on March 4, 2010, to exclude shares of corporations (and
certain other interests) that do not derive their value principally
from real property situated in Canada, Canadian resource property,
or timber resource property. If such interests derived more than
50% of their value from these types of property at any time during
the 60-month period that ends upon the disposition, such interests
would be TCP.
Note that unlike other Canadian provinces, Québec has rules
for taxable Québec property that are similar to the ones
under the Income Tax Act (Canada) for TCP. No announcement
has been made yet whether Québec will harmonize its rules
with the TCP proposals in the Budget.
Reporting of Tax Avoidance Transactions
The Budget proposes, subject to public consultation, provisions which would require the reporting of "reportable transactions" to the Canada Revenue Agency ("CRA"). A reportable transaction would be an "avoidance transaction" (in approximate terms, one entered into primarily for the purposes of avoiding or deferring tax) where the transaction had at least two of the following three characteristics:
- A promoter or tax advisor in respect of the transaction is entitled to fees in respect of the transaction that are to any extent contingent upon the obtaining of the tax benefit or based on its amount or the number of taxpayers who participate in the transaction or receive advice of the promoter or advisor of the tax consequences.
- The promoter or tax advisor requires "confidential protection" (not yet defined) about the transaction.
- The taxpayer obtains "contractual protection" (also not defined) in respect of the transaction.
If a reportable transaction has not been reported on a timely
basis, the CRA would be able to deny the tax benefit - unless the
taxpayer files with the CRA any required information and pays a
penalty.
These proposals, as modified to take into account the consultation
process, would apply to avoidance transactions entered into after
2010, as well as those that are part of a series of transactions
completed after 2010.
Transactions that were tax shelters or flow through share
arrangements (which are already subject to an existing set of
disclosure rules) would not be affected by these proposals.
Income Trust Conversions
Canadian income tax changes first announced in 2006, will subject
most income trusts (other than certain real estate investment
trusts) to entity-level taxation on January 1, 2011, and the
traditional tax benefits of conducting business through a Canadian
income trust structure will be eliminated. Many income trusts have
already converted to corporations. Some of these income trust
conversions have been structured to include loss companies in an
effort to allow the successor corporations to continue to
distribute cash flows without the incurrence of entity level
taxation for a period of time.
The Income Tax Act (Canada) deems control of a corporation
to have been acquired in certain circumstances, including in the
case of a so-called "reverse takeover" of a public
corporation. This rule will be extended to apply to the conversion
of income trusts into corporations. As a result, the ability to use
a loss company's tax losses following the conversion of an
income trust will be constrained. These changes apply to income
trust conversions after 4:00 p.m. EST on March 4, 2010, other than
conversions that must be completed pursuant to an agreement in
writing entered into before that time (for these purposes, there is
no such obligation if a party may be excused from completing the
transaction as a result of changes to the Income Tax Act
(Canada)).
Foreign Investment Entities and Non-Resident
Trusts
Complex proposals with respect to non-resident trusts and foreign
investment entities were first introduced in the 1999 Budget. In
response to concerns from the tax community regarding the
complexity of these provisions, combined with numerous technical
problems, the 2009 Budget announced that the proposals would be
reviewed before the government proceeded with legislative
amendments. The Budget contains revised proposals with respect to
foreign investment entities and non-resident trusts, which will be
subject to a consultation process with a view to releasing revised
legislation for comment.
The Budget proposes to retain the foreign investment entity
provisions which are currently in force, with limited enhancements.
The currently enacted provisions require an income inclusion with
respect to an interest in an "offshore investment fund
property" in certain circumstances. The 2010 proposals
increase the prescribed rate applicable in computing this income
inclusion to the three-month average Treasury Bill rate plus two
percentage points. They also broaden the existing rules to apply to
interests in certain trusts that are not subject to the
non-resident trust rules described below, and extend the normal
reassessment period in respect of these interests by three years.
The former proposals were vastly more complex than the currently
enacted foreign investment entity rules, and the Budget proposals
represent a significant improvement in this respect.
The Budget changes to the proposals in respect of non-resident
trusts are generally relieving in nature. The former proposals
imposed Canadian tax on the worldwide income of a non-resident
trust where there was a resident beneficiary or a resident
contributor to the trust, for which such beneficiaries and
contributors were jointly and severally liable. The revised
proposals contain a carve-out for investments in non-resident
trusts by tax-exempt entities, which will address concerns over the
inappropriate application of the rules in this context. They also
expand the carve-outs from the application of the proposed rules
for commercial trusts, in recognition that the former proposals
were overly broad.
The revised non-resident trust proposals generally exclude from the
trust's income for purposes of these rules any income arising
from property contributed to the trust by non-residents of Canada
(with the exception of certain former residents), other than
Canadian-source income otherwise subject to tax. In addition, the
trust's income is attributed to its resident contributors in
proportion to their relative contributions to the trust. The trust
is entitled to a deduction for the amount of its income payable to
its beneficiaries in the year and for amounts attributed to
resident contributors. These measures are generally proposed to
apply in respect of the 2007 and subsequent taxation years, with
the attribution of trust income to resident contributors applicable
in respect of taxation years ending after March 4, 2010.
Countering arguments that Canada's income tax treaties can
effectively override the non-resident trust rules, the Budget
further proposes to amend the Income Tax Conventions
Interpretation Act to provide that a trust that is deemed to
be resident in Canada under these rules will be considered a
resident of Canada for tax treaty purposes.
Mineral Exploration Tax Credit
The sunset provisions for the federal mineral exploration tax
credit of 15% have been extended by a further year. The related
flow-through share agreement must now be entered into on or before
March 31, 2011.
Foreign Tax Credits
The Budget includes proposals to target transactions that are
referred to in the Budget documents as "foreign tax credit
generators" (generally certain transactions that allow tax
credits or other tax relief to both Canadian and foreign
participants for the same foreign tax). These proposals are
intended to eliminate the Canadian tax benefits of participating in
certain of these transactions.
Interest on Corporate Tax Overpayments
The interest rate payable by the Canadian Government on corporate
tax overpayments will be reduced effective July 1, 2010 by two
percentage points. This is in response to a concern raised by the
Auditor General that corporations were voluntarily overpaying their
taxes to benefit from above-market interest rates.
Taxation of Corporate Groups
The Government announced that it will again explore the possibility
of introducing a formal system of loss transfers or consolidated
reporting for corporate groups and will seek taxpayers' views
in that respect. In 1985, the Department of Finance had released a
discussion paper recommending the use of losses within a group but
these recommendations were never adopted. As a result, the
Income Tax Act (Canada) contains no comprehensive loss
consolidation regime and taxpayers often undertake complicated
transactions (generally relying on the administrative practices of
the CRA) to achieve such results.
GST on Investment Management Services
The Budget contains draft legislation to implement a proposal previously announced on December 14, 2009, to narrow the types of services that qualify as exempt financial services. Among other provisions, the draft legislation provides that asset management fees will be subject to GST (or HST, as the case may be). This term will refer to a service of:
- managing or administering the assets or liabilities of another, irrespective of the level of discretionary authority of the service provider [this responds to a court decision which found discretionary investment management services to be exempt];
- providing research, analysis, advice or reports in respect of the assets or liabilities;
- determining which assets or liabilities are to be acquired or disposed of; or
- acting to realize performance targets or other objectives in respect of the assets or liabilities.
This change (and other proposals "clarifying" that various facilitatory services and credit management services are taxable) will be retroactive to the introduction of the GST in 1990, except that they will not apply to transactions where (in general terms) the supplier did not charge GST and was paid on or before December 14, 2009. Accordingly, refund claims based on the loss of the Government in the relevant court cases have been cut off.
The content of this article is intended to provide a general guide to the subject matter. Specialist advice should be sought about your specific circumstances.