重新思考加拿大税收递延退休储蓄的限制

W. Robson
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引用次数: 11

摘要

限制加拿大人在各种退休储蓄工具中可获得的递延纳税金额的税收规则,需要在它们之间实现某种程度的对等。自1990年以来,这一措施一直是九的因素,基于这样一个命题,即储蓄年收入的9%将让一个人购买相当于退休前收入1%的退休年金。四分之一个世纪后,九因子的缺陷显而易见,改变的理由令人信服。九的因素是在一套特定的人口和经济环境下运作的一种特定类型的固定收益养恤金计划的计算结果。这是一个粗略的衡量标准。它忽略了在不同的固定收益计划下可能使财富累积更大或更小的特征。它对不同年龄的人有不同的影响。而且它已经严重过时了。人们的寿命越来越长,更重要的是,适合退休储蓄的投资收益非常低。这些变化提高了获得一定水平退休收入的成本。指定等价物的未改变因素使人们在购买货币的安排中储蓄,如固定缴款养老金计划和rrsp,相对于固定收益计划的人处于主要劣势。三种类型的改革可以缓解九因素的问题:•更新九因素背后的假设,以反映当前的经济和人口现实;这样做将把目前的年度税收递延储蓄限额从目前的18%提高到30%左右,甚至超过30%。•通过优化因素,使其随着年龄的增长而升级,并/或反映养老金计划设计的差异,为税收递延储蓄创造公平的竞争环境。•用更慷慨的制度取代目前固定缴款养老金计划参与者和RRSP储户的年度税收递延储蓄限额:要么将未使用的供款空间与通货膨胀挂钩,要么更有远见地建立一个与通货膨胀挂钩的终身税收递延储蓄限额,使所有储户获得与相对全面的固定缴款计划参与者相同的养老金财富。再过四分之一个世纪无所作为将是不合情理的。加拿大人的寿命继续延长。全球增长放缓和高储蓄可能会在未来几十年压低实际回报率。当人们为退休储蓄时递延的税收一旦退休就会得到支付。不参加公共部门养老金计划的加拿大人应该有更多的储蓄机会,不公平的税收待遇不应该成为他们的障碍。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Rethinking Limits on Tax-Deferred Retirement Savings in Canada
Tax rules limiting the amount of tax deferral available to Canadians in various retirement saving vehicles need some measure of equivalency among them. Since 1990 this measure has been the Factor of Nine, based on the proposition that saving 9 percent of annual earnings will let a person buy a retirement annuity equal to 1 percent of pre-retirement income. A quarter century later, the flaws in the Factor of Nine are glaring and the case for change is compelling. The Factor of Nine is the result of calculations based on one particular type of defined-benefit pension plan operating under one specific set of demographic and economic circumstances. It is a crude measure. It neglects features that can make wealth accruals under different defined-benefit plans larger or smaller. It affects people of different ages differently. And it is badly out of date. People are living longer and – even more important – yields on investments suitable for retirement saving are very low. These changes have raised the cost of obtaining a given level of retirement income. The unchanged factor specifying equivalency puts people saving in money-purchase arrangements such as defined-contribution pension plans and RRSPs at a major disadvantage relative to people in definedbenefit plans. Three types of reforms could alleviate problems with the Factor of Nine: • Update the assumptions underlying the Factor of Nine to reflect current economic and demographic realities; doing that would raise the current annual tax-deferred savings limit from its current 18 percent to a number around or even exceeding 30 percent. • Level the playing field for tax-deferred saving by refining the factors so that they escalate with age and/or reflect differences in pension plan design. • Replace the current annual tax-deferred saving limits for defined-contribution pension plan participants and RRSP savers with more generous regimes: either index unused contribution room for inflation or, more farsightedly, establish an inflation-indexed lifetime tax-deferred savings limit that will permit all savers to achieve pension wealth equal to that of participants in relatively comprehensive defined-benefit plans. Inaction over another quarter century would be unconscionable. Canadians continue to live longer. Slower world growth and high saving will likely depress real returns for decades. Taxes deferred when people save for retirement get paid once people are retired. Canadians who do not participate in public-sector pension plans should have more opportunities to save, and unfair tax treatment should not stand in their way.
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