Thank you very much.
I have a day job as the vice-president of tax and estate planning with AIM Trimark Investments. AIM Trimark is also a member of the Investment Funds Institute of Canada, so I also volunteer with that organization and head up their taxation working group. It's in that capacity that I come here today to make some comments specifically on what the Investment Funds Institute of Canada is looking for as recommendations on tax policy.
Specifically, we really believe that as a country we need to address the issue of secure retirement for all Canadians. We have an increasing number of Canadians who are reaching retirement age, the baby boomers—you've been reading about that in all the local media—and we have a number of recommendations, which I'll take you through. They're fully in our brief, which we've circulated earlier. We want to encourage Canadians themselves to sit in the driver's seat when it comes to saving for their own retirement, as opposed to relying solely on government programs or even partially on government subsidies.
We have a number of recommendations that specifically focus on incentives that will encourage and enable all Canadians to save for their own retirement. In fact, we have divided our five recommendations into two sections. We have a number of recommendations on non-registered investing—this would be investing outside of a pension plan or an RRSP or RRIF—and we have a number of recommendations for registered investing.
Firstly, on the non-registered side our first recommendation is to maybe do some further research and perhaps implement the tax pre-paid savings program or TPSP. This was talked about a couple of years ago and is very similar to a Roth IRA that exists in the United States. This type of savings vehicle would allow every Canadian to contribute to a tax-deferred vehicle. They wouldn't get a tax deduction for those contributions, but while the money is inside the plan it would grow on a tax-deferred basis. The added benefit is that when the money comes out, it is also non-taxed. The real benefit here is that if it's non-taxable on the way out, it will probably encourage lower-income Canadians to start saving for retirement.
The current problem you're all familiar with is the very convoluted clawback system we have for the guaranteed income supplement. There have been numerous studies that show that for lower-income Canadians it doesn't make sense to save inside a registered plan, because every dollar they take out of that plan directly impacts their government support. If they were able to save in a different type of vehicle, such as a tax pre-paid savings plan, having the withdrawals come out on a tax-free basis might encourage them to save for their own retirement.
Furthermore, we would recommend introducing some type of grant program—similar, let's say, to the RESP education savings grant of 20%. Let's say a low-income Canadian, defined as someone getting under $35,000 or so a year, could contribute $1,000 to this type of vehicle. Perhaps there'd be a 20% matching grant by the government of $200, to encourage all Canadians to save for their own retirement.
Our second recommendation would follow up on the suggestion that was made in the run-up to the recent election by the Conservatives, which was the elimination or at least deferral of the capital gains tax. We certainly know, in looking at behavioural finance studies, that one of the biggest impetus for people reallocating assets is the inherent capital gains. As the Conservatives suggested in their election brief, the ability to defer capital gains tax if you reinvest the proceeds within six months is a very attractive idea.
The question is implementation. There have been a number of ideas suggested on how this might work. One was by the C.D. Howe Institute, suggesting that there might be a capital gains deferral account. While this idea is certainly intriguing, the implementation administratively might be complex. Perhaps the government wants to go back to re-examine something like an exemption for capital gains entirely. That would really simplify the system.
Turning to the registered plans side, we have three recommendations. The first one is simply to increase the age at which you are required to take money out of an RRSP. With Canadians living longer, and also with Canadians working longer, it might make sense to increase that age, which is now at 69, and bring it up to maybe 73.
Second of all, for low-income Canadians we would like to exclude any RRSP and RRIF withdrawals, when they're taken out, from income—in other words, from income in terms of the GIS clawback. We would like to see, if lower-income Canadians withdraw money they've managed to save for their own retirement inside an RRSP or RRIF, that those withdrawals are excluded from the calculation of the guaranteed income supplement, so that they would actually be encouraged to save for their own retirement.
Finally, here is our last recommendation. Although we found that the RRSP contribution limits have been increasing over the last number of years, what we would recommend is that we continue to allow further increases to the RRSP limits, so that Canadians who need to save on average about 70% of their earnings to be able to have retirement income would be able to also maximize their opportunities.
Thank you very much.