Dan Walkow Asks David Ingram About Cross-border Investment Tax Implications - part II
Wednesday, April 15 2009 @ 11:36 AM PDT
Segment 2 (Click here to view segment 1)
Dan quizes David on taxation and beneficiaries of US retirement programs
- Dan is one of the very few people who can sell both a US IRA and a Canadian RRSP in Canada or US - and manage them after their owners move away from the jurisdiction of their original investment vendor.
- American retirement programs - IRA - Individual Retirement Account and Roth IRA (which is similar to the Canadian TFSA)
- Rolling IRA to Roth IRA - whether this is good from a tax perspective
- Having more than one IRA account
- Beneficiary aspects in the US - Name your children and roll the IRA to them.
- Age where it is necessary to take distributions from IRA
- Other retirement accounts including 401K - "a company - group Retirement plan" - must be rolled over to IRA when you leave the employment. This is especially a problem for a Canadian laid off from a US company - having returned from the US they have no way to roll the 401K because they're now in Canada - except that Dan's company can deal with this because they are able to deal across the border in both jurisdictions.
- David continually sees clients who have been "forced" to liquidate their 401K (or IRA) when they moved back to Canada, even though there is no real reason - only the "policy" of the vendor who no longer can deal with their client who now resides outside the US jurisdiction they are allowed to deal in. Again, Dan's company can deal with this situation
- Taxable jurisdictions for working in a foreign country. Loss of options for rolling retirement plans to children in the US after moving back to Canada.
- Gifting the proceeds of a retirement plan to kids and spouse - amounts and rules
- The generation skipping tax
- Estate tax on estates over $3.5 million - example of how this works.
- In David's opinion it is most likely that an American estate will pay tax to Canada on estate than vice versa if assets are held on both sides of the border
- Discussion of the Canada/US tax convention - examples of when you are taxable on your world income
- Canada taxes on citizenship (i.e. world income) if they can't prove residency outside of Canada - examples of people working out of the country and being or not being a non-resident of Canada for tax purposes. US taxes on world income regardless of residency.
- Differences in tax regime between US and Canada
- David shows that Canada has a lower tax rate for most cases. This does not even take into account the fact that Canadians also have medical from the government!
- Examples of different taxation in BC vs California
Continue watching segment 2 of this fascinating interview
You can contact Dan Walkow at:
Suite 301-1959 152nd Street
White Rock, BC V4A 9E3
Canada
Phone: 604-541-9952
Toll Free: 1-866-541-9952
Fax: 604-542-5642
The views expressed in this interview do not necessarily reflect those of the production company presenting this video. This is a paid presentation of Seabank Capital Management Inc.
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