Thank you, Mr. Chair.
I'm Malcolm Burrows, and I'm head of philanthropic advisory services at Scotia Private Client Group, which is the arm of Scotiabank that deals with affluent clients. I'm a charitable planner. I'm also a charitable tax policy wonk, which I've been happy to contribute to over the last 15 years through a number of sector organizations.
I grew up in the charitable sector and worked there for 13 years before coming to Scotiabank, including at Imagine Canada, for the Canadian Association of Gift Planners--who you met earlier in the week--and for the C.D. Howe Institute.
I was very involved with the development of three proposals, including the stretch tax credit, that have been put forward by a number of groups. I chaired the committee at Imagine Canada that developed the stretch tax credit proposal. I also wrote a paper for the C.D. Howe Institute that outlined some of the basic principles proposed for the elimination of capital gains on gifts of private company shares and taxable real estate.
That being said, those proposals are quite well defined, so I want to confine my comments today to a bit of a framework for what constitutes good tax policy in the charitable space. I want to comment on the state of the Canadian system, the limits of tax support for donations, and finally, three factors for evaluating a good charitable tax incentive.
I want to start by saying that we have quite possibly the most generous tax system for the support of charitable donations in the world. There are three elements to this.
The tax credit, as has been mentioned by a number of witnesses, is very little understood, but it is very generous. Even at the first $200 tier, it is a pure offset that donors, as taxpayers, get back in tax savings, even at the 15% rate. In B.C., if you have $65,000 in income you're paying 20% in tax, and you get a combined rate of 20% back on the first $200. Then it jumps to 43%. It's unlike the U.S. system, where you never go beyond your tax rate; it's a deduction system. So we already have a significantly more generous system than the U.S.
We have contribution limits, which are how much you can give and claim against your net annual income each year. We have the highest limits in the world. It's 75% of income during life and 100% at death. At death, you can eliminate taxes by giving enough to charity. This is unique in the world.
We also have extra incentives for donations of capital property. This is a regime that has developed over a number of years and has focused on gifts of public securities. It's been immensely important and has brought significant new dollars into the system. They are additional generous incentives.
We've been working at expanding this system over a number of years, particularly since the mid-nineties, and we are at the point where we have a very rich system. What more can we do?
I want to comment a little bit on the limits of tax incentives. We tend to look at taxes in Canada as the sole lever for donations. They are not. Donations are not primarily a tax transaction. We have to look at the role of altruism. A gift is something that's freely given without consideration. You are impoverished by giving a gift. You give it because you want to help society. If we inflate the tax system too much, one of the things that happens is that we diminish the role of altruism and philanthropy.
The other thing is donor motivation. As you heard last week from Professor Paul Reed, there are two types of tax incentive that help with certain types of donations and are less helpful with others. At the lower end, tax is a very low motivation. Most people don't know the tax incentives. Let's look at the transaction. If your ten-year-old niece asks you for a donation because she's doing an event, do you calculate the tax benefits? Heck, no.
The median gift is $260. Most people don't think about the tax benefits at all. As a matter of fact, Alberta increased their tax credit amount to 50%, which is much higher than anywhere else in Canada. Their giving did not go up more than B.C.'s. Manitoba still has a higher rate of participation.
Where it does help is with gifts of assets, and this has been an important part of the system. So there are three factors we would look at. First, I think if we look at any incentive we have to make sure that the government is protected. Is more money coming into the system for the amount invested? Second, is there an incentive to the donor but not an unreasonable incentive? Third, are charities protected?
Picking up on Mr. Aptowitzer's comments, if we have incentives we have to make sure that charities can handle things like private company shares as well as taxable real estate. So I'm in support of all three proposals, but we have to look at the framework around them.
Thank you.