Canadian Payroll Reporter - sample

May 2017

Focuses on issues of importance to payroll professionals across Canada. It contains news, case studies, profiles and tracks payroll-related legislation to help employers comply with all the rules and regulations governing their organizations.

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6 Canadian HR Reporter, a Thomson Reuters business 2017 News with group MSP plans. The government is proposing to reduce MSP premium rates by 50 per cent for B.C. households with annual net incomes of up to $120,000, as of Jan. 1, 2018. De Jong said the reduction is the first step towards eventually eliminating premiums. To receive the 50 per cent re- duction, households would first have to register with the govern- ment; however, it would auto- matically make the change for individuals and families who re- ceive MSP premium assistance. Employees who pay premi- ums through their employer's group plan or whose employer pays their premiums for them as a taxable benefit would have to register for the premium re- duction with their group plan administrator. The finance ministry said this is necessary to ensure that employers withhold the proper amount for deductions or report the correct amount for taxable benefits. Budget documents advised employees to discuss the reg- istration with their group plan administrator in the coming months so that they will receive the reduction in January. The ministry also suggested that em- ployers who pay premiums for employees as a taxable benefit discuss with employees how to share the benefit from the 50 per cent reduction. The budget also proposed eliminating an education tax credit that individuals claim on a British Columbia Personal Tax Credits Return (TD1BC), as of Jan. 1, 2018. The budget did not contain any adjustments to personal in- come tax rates or tax brackets or to the provincial sales tax rate. It is the last budget for the cur- rent Liberal government before a provincial election May 9. Quebec: The 2017-2018 Quebec bud- get, which Finance Minister Carlos Leitão released March 28, revealed the government is increasing the basic personal amount that employees claim on a Source Deductions Return from $11,635 to $14,890 for 2017. The other amounts claimed on the form will also rise. Beginning in 2018, the amounts will be auto- matically indexed each year. Leitão also announced that the government is changing the way it calculates personal tax cred- its in order to make the income tax system simpler. Currently in Quebec, tax credit amounts are calculated using the tax rate that applies for the second taxable income bracket, which is 20 per cent. "Using the rate applicable to the second taxable income bracket of the personal income tax table makes the Quebec tax system more complex for tax- payers, since a factor of 1.25 must be applied to each amount granted for the purpose of cal- culating personal tax credits, in order to determine the taxable income to which it corresponds," budget documents stated. To simplify the calculation, this year the government plans to begin using the tax rate for the first taxable income bracket, set at 16 per cent. This is the method that other Canadian jurisdic- tions use to calculate amounts for their personal tax credits. For 2017, individuals will see these tax changes when they file their personal income tax return. As a result, the budget stated that payroll profession- als will not need to incorporate the changes in their income tax source deduction calculations this year. Revenu Québec will include the changes in its payroll deduction tables in 2018. Other items of interest to pay- roll announced in the budget include: • The government is making its elimination of a mandatory health contribution retroac- tive to 2016 for individuals whose income does not exceed $134,095. Last fall, Leitão an- nounced that the government would eliminate the health contribution for all contribu- tors in 2017, a year earlier than previously planned. The 2017 elimination date still applies for adults with incomes over $134,095. Employees affected by the change who paid the contribution through source deductions at work will re- ceive a refund after they file their 2016 personal income tax return. • The government is delaying its planned elimination of a compensation tax that ap- plies to financial institutions until March 31, 2024. The tax, which is calculated on amounts paid as wages and on insurance premiums, was to be abolished as of March 31, 2019. The government is also delaying planned rate reduc- tions for the tax until March 31, 2022. They were to have been put in place as of April 1. • The deadline for applying for a Health Services Fund tax holiday for large investment projects in the province is ex- tended to Dec. 31, 2020. The deadline was supposed to be Nov. 20 of this year. • The government plans to ex- tend current tax measures to support new corporations in the financial sector until the end of 2022. One of the mea- sures allows foreign specialists working at a new financial ser- vices corporation to take ad- vantage of a five-year income tax holiday that would reduce their taxable income. The budget also highlighted initiatives Revenu Québec is taking to improve its service, including implementing a pro- gram this year to offer guidance to small and mid-size businesses in order to help them fulfill their tax obligations. Saskatchewan: Payroll professionals with Sas- katchewan payrolls will have to implement personal income tax rate changes for July 1. The provincial budget, which Finance Minister Kevin Doherty tabled March 22, announced that the government would re- duce all three provincial person- al income tax rates by a half point on July 1. The government also plans to lower the rates by another half point on July 1, 2019. "Every Saskatchewan taxpay- er at every income level will see a decrease in their income taxes, and those whose income is too low to pay income tax will see an increase in the Saskatchewan Low-Income Tax Credit they re- ceive," Doherty said. The budget also proposed to temporarily halt annual index- ing of the province's personal income tax system, beginning in 2018. The change would af- fect provincial taxable income brackets and personal amounts employees claim on a Saskatche- wan Personal Tax Credits Return (TD1SK). Doherty said the suspension would remain in place until the province's finances improve. The budget also included an- other proposal that would affect the TD1SK. Effective July 1, the government plans to eliminate post-secondary education and tuition tax credits claimed on the form. It is expected that the CRA will update the form to in- corporate the proposed changes. To help the government deal with a deficit, the budget also raised the provincial sales tax (PST) rate from five per cent to six cent, as of March 23. The change affects employers who provide taxable benefits that are subject to the PST. The government also an- nounced that it was eliminating a number of PST exemptions, including those for restaurant meals and insurance premiums. Beginning April 1, restaurant meals are subject to PST. As of July 1, the tax is set to ap- ply to insurance premiums, in- cluding life, accident, and health insurance. Budget documents stated that the PST would apply on insurance premiums that are due on or after that date, regard- less of when the insurance policy was issued. Governments in Alberta, New Brunswick, the Northwest Territories and Nunavut have released budgets recently, but they did not include any payroll- related proposals. Personal tax credit changes planned for Quebec from PROVINCIAL on page 1 May 2017 | CPR "Every Saskatchewan taxpayer at every income level will see a decrease in their income taxes."

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