开个专贴转些税务有关的文章

Real estate flippers beware, the taxman is watching
With the economy in turbulence, some Canadians have openly started to wonder whether our housing market may be next. Despite that possible scenario, the temptation to buy, renovate and then sell real estate at a profit is still irresistible for many. And, if you don’t know how to get started, a number of U.S. TV shows have debuted in the past couple of years with names such as Flip or Flop, Flip it Forwardand, most recently, Flip Addict that will walk you through the process.

You should be aware, however, that if you are indeed successful in making a profit from your real estate activities, the taxman will be watching and will want a piece of the action. Of course, just how big a piece he’ll want depends on whether your profitable sale is treated as a capital gain, in which case only 50% is taxable, or business income, in which case 100% is subject to tax.

Take a recent tax case involving a Montreal woman who found herself in Tax Court fighting CRA reassessments for her 2007, 2008 and 2009 tax years, in which she disposed of six real estate properties and reported over $100,000 in profits as 50% taxable capital gains. The CRA sought to reassess these transactions as business income and thus fully taxable. Of note, the average holding period of five of these properties was nine months and she financed her properties through a closed, one-year mortgage.

The taxpayer’s argument was that she wanted to keep the real estate “in order to generate rental income and extra income during retirement,” even though she reported significant rental losses in two tax years and she didn’t keep any of her properties for the long term. Responding to these counterarguments, the taxpayer stated that the reason she sold the real estate within such a short time frame was that “rents were too low.” This argument didn’t fly with the CRA who maintained that the taxpayer “has a lot of experience and could not have been unaware that the price of income properties is determined on the basis of rents.”

While the Income Tax Act itself doesn’t list the criteria to distinguish when profits are taxed as business income rather than a capital gain, the case law has developed a number of factors that should be taken into account in making this distinction.

They include: the nature of the property sold, the length of time the taxpayer owned the property, the frequency and number of transactions carried out by the taxpayer, the improvements made by the taxpayer to the property, the circumstances surrounding the sale of the property and the taxpayer’s intention at the time the property was acquired, as indicated by the taxpayer’s actions.

The judge, upon reviewing the applicable criteria in this particular case, concluded that “it is much more probable and likely” that the Montreal taxpayer acquired the properties for the purpose of reselling them at a profit “at the earliest opportunity” rather than holding them as long-term investments with the intention “to build a diversified retirement portfolio,” and that her main intention was to make short-term investment returns.

As a result, the taxpayer’s appeal was dismissed and the CRA’s reassessments to treat the taxpayer’s profits as business income were upheld.
 
Potential solutions to deal with tax evasion in real estate market

Federal Finance Minister Bill Morneau has said he’ll be watching as a parliamentary committee prepares to study how frothy real estate sales in Toronto and Vancouver are affecting the country’s financial system, but tax experts say there are already some remedies within easy reach to address the problem.

Since a Globe and Mail investigation revealed possible tax evasion and fraud in Metro Vancouver’s housing market, B.C. Finance Minister Mike de Jong has urged his federal counterpart to toughen existing rules.

Experts say there are already several solutions that provincial authorities and the Canada Revenue Agency can implement, many without changing existing federal tax laws, to help curtail the speculative activity detailed by The Globe. The investigation showed how real estate speculator Kenny Gu paid almost nothing in taxes last year, while millions of dollars flowed through his personal and corporate bank accounts.

Related: Vancouver real estate speculators taking advantage of loopholes and lax oversight

Related: Four charts that explain the impact of the Vancouver-region’s foreign buyer tax

Documents suggest Mr. Gu is among a network of speculators who flip homes for a profit, then dodge taxes by classifying multiple homes as principal residences – without living in them.

Currently, the CRA requires homeowners who sell a principal residence to designate it as such on a standard form and keep it for their personal records, but they don’t have to report the sale with their tax return. That has allowed taxpayers to buy and sell multiple properties without notifying the tax agency.

Owners selling their principal residence in Canada don’t have to pay any tax on the sale.

Richard Kurland, a prominent Vancouver-based immigration lawyer, said this issue has become a matter of social justice, noting clients tell him they see this loophole being widely used by others. “When people who do the right thing feel badly because other people are getting away with doing the wrong thing – that’s when you have to step in,” Mr. Kurland said.

Here is a list of potential solutions experts say could help crack down on that practice:

Tracking real estate transactions and sharing tax residency information:

The contract of every residential property sold in B.C. already has a box the seller ticks to declare whether they reside in Canada for tax purposes, Mr. Kurland noted. That’s done so that realtors and lawyers are not liable if their client leaves the country without paying the standard withholding tax of 25 per cent on their profits from the sale.

But that information is not registered with the land title office, he said.

The provincial government could compel each home buyer and seller to disclose their tax status to the Land Title and Survey Authority of B.C. any time the ownership of a residential property changes hands, according to Mr. Kurland.

That office could then pass these details to the CRA, which would allow the federal body to cross-reference individual tax records to weed out those avoiding paying the proper fees on investment residences.

“This is the lowest-hanging fruit possible,” he said.

“B.C. refuses to collect the information – without explanation. They are not publicly saying why.”

Mr. Kurland said he has been told privately by Liberal MLAs that such a move would contradict their political philosophy that “government should not have the capacity to know who owns what.”

B.C.’s acting privacy commissioner Drew McArthur said B.C. could force homebuyers to disclose their tax status – and stay on the right side of the province’s privacy law – as long as people are informed that the information is being shared with the CRA.

A spokesman at the B.C. finance ministry said his government began collecting social insurance numbers and citizenship information on all residential property transfers last month as part of its new tax on foreign buyers. It now shares that information with the CRA if the federal agency is conducting audits and reviews of individuals. But Mr. Kurland says that still leaves out the all-important tax status of the party in question.

Report every real estate transaction directly to the CRA

Gary McDonnell, a retired accountant and former partner at KPMG, said the simplest fix regarding the abuse of principal residence claims is for every real estate transaction to be reported directly to the federal tax agency.

“If the taxpayer knows that all property transactions are being reported to CRA, they would be under no illusions of getting away without reporting the sale of a property,” Mr. McDonnell said.

Stock brokerage firms have long had to report all stock dispositions to the CRA, including the social insurance number of the account holder, he said. Before the government made that change to the rules, many critics said it was an invasion of privacy, Mr. McDonnell said.

“But they passed the law and it basically became accepted,” he said.

Experts acknowledge it could take the CRA years to build the IT capability to receive – and act – on all this information.

Post tax auditors overseas

Much like how Ottawa has prescreened immigrants at airports across the globe for more than two decades, the federal government could send CRA officers to key cities in East Asia and Europe – where information-sharing agreements exist – to liaise with local auditors there. This is an expensive solution, “but the payback will be astronomical, very quickly,” he said.

These CRA officers would offer “boots on the ground” to dig for property and tax records held by overseas bureaucracies, some of which are not able to share digital records with ease, he said.

“They’ve got to step outside the Canadian pond – it’s a global problem, it requires a global solution,” Mr. Kurland said.

In the 1990s, the CRA sent officers down to Florida to check land-registry data and capture Canadian snowbirds that were avoiding taxes, he said.

Continuing crackdown by the CRA

The CRA has doubled its efforts to catch tax cheats in B.C.’s real estate sector, completing nearly 2,500 audits related to real estate in B.C. and Ontario over the past year. The agency plans to do as many or more in the next year and now has 50 auditors looking into Metro Vancouver real estate transactions, specifically targeting 500 “high-dollar-value” deals from 2015.

Federal figures reviewed by The Globe and confirmed by the tax agency show that auditors discovered $14.3-million in unpaid taxes from 339 individuals and companies last year through increased scrutiny of flips and other real-estate transactions in the region.

But a CRA auditor, who requested anonymity for fear of being fired, told The Globe that the agency is barely scratching the surface of the tax dodging going on and its auditors won’t catch many people because they are inexperienced with such files.

In a bulletin this week, the federal agency warned that it will investigate anyone who flips properties, which it defined as anyone who buys and resells a home in a short period of time for a profit.

The CRA said there are three main categories of flippers who could face penalties for not reporting their profits as business income: professional contractors, shadow flippers – those who assign contracts for profit – and people who live in a home briefly so they can claim a principal-residence exemption several times in their lifetime.
 
But a CRA auditor, who requested anonymity for fear of being fired, told The Globe that the agency is barely scratching the surface of the tax dodging going on and its auditors won’t catch many people because they are inexperienced with such files.
很有意思是上面这句,这的确是现状,CRA好象在忙乎,但很多审计的关键的问题很大看不到,往往逮着小问题欢天喜地地去汇报了,或者没有问题的逮着不放浪费时间。
 

肖臻

超签保险/探亲旅游保险/人寿/签证、留学、移民 6478687268
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