It’s Registered Retirement Savings Plan season! From now until the last day of February, there will many advertisements all over the place exhorting you to make a contribution to your RRSP.
If you need more detailed information about the rules, then I would suggest that you visit the website for the Canada Revenue Agency. Alternatively, you can talk to your accountant or a financial advisor. This article does not in any way, shape or form constitute comprehensive accounting or legal advice about RRSPs. I am not a professional nor am I giving you any kind of investing advice. This post is a starting point for you to make inquiries, learn the basics, and take responsibility for your future by determining how to use RRSPs to your best advantage.
For my part, I really like RRSPs. I’ve been contributing to mine since I was 21 years old. Every year, I get a tax refund which is promptly re-invested for retirement or put towards an annual vacation. I’m very diligent about automatic transfers to my investment portfolio so I’m quite comfortable with spending my RRSP-generated tax refund on whatever my heart desires.
RRSPs offer tax-deferred growth. You can pick almost any kind of investment to put under the tax-deferred umbrella. On top of that, you might even qualify for a tax refund if you make a contribution. If you’re in a higher tax bracket when you put money in than when you take it out, you’ve saved money on both sides of the transaction.
Remember – it’s tax-deferred savings, not tax-free savings. If you contribute when you’re in the 33% tax bracket, then your tax refund is based on that tax bracket. If you’re in a lower tax bracket when you take the money out, say the 26% tax bracket for instance, then you’ll pay tax on that RRSP withdrawal at 26%. This means you’ll be 7% to the good. Woohoo!
In my humble opinion, RRSPs have many commendable benefits.
However, not every product is perfect. RRSP contribution room can be lost if you make a contribution and then withdraw the money outside of two very specific RRSP programs. Those programs are the Lifelong Learners Plan or the HomeBuyer’s Plan. In short, if you contribute $1000 to your RRSP and then withdraw that money outside of the aforementioned programs, then you cannot put that money back into your RRSP in the future. Unlike the Tax Free Savings Account, which allows for contribution room to be re-captured if a withdrawal is made, your RRSP contribution room is gone forever once you withdraw your money.
Another associated drawback to RRSPs, in certain circumstances, is the creation of a nemesis commonly known as D-E-B-T.
“How can an RRSP result in debt?” you ask.
It’s quite simple. At this time of year, banks love to give people RRSP loans. Customers borrow money, contribute to their RRSP, and then they’re supposed to use the tax refund to pay down the RRSP loan. Whether the tax refund is actually applied to the outstanding balance on the RRSP loan is anyone’s guess. The tax refund goes straight to the borrower who took out the loan and it can be used however the borrower wants it to be used. Concert tickets? Holiday? Extra mortgage payment? Cigarettes? The choice is limited only by the borrower’s imagination and common sense. There’s no requirement for the tax refund to pay down the RRSP loan.
In my humble opinion, failing to pay down the loan with the tax refund is most likely a stupid move because do you know what else belongs to the borrower? The loan payments! If the tax refund is spent on something other than the RRSP loan, the loan payments still have to be made because the borrower put himself into debt by taking out the loan in the first place!
Even if the tax refund is applied towards the RRSP loan, trust me when I say that the refund won’t be enough to cover the principal of the loan which means that the borrower is on the hook for the remaining balance of the loan.
Keep in mind that the banks aren’t lending you money interest-free. They might defer the interest on the first 90-days of the loan, in the expectation that you’ll apply any tax refund towards the debt, but don’t hold your breath. Way back in the Palaeolithic period when I worked for a financial institution, this is what my overlords did for the customers. I have no idea if this is still the practice. However, if you can’t repay the loan in full within the grace period, then you will be paying interest on your RRSP loan until it’s completely repaid.
The other big drawback to the RRSP loan is that it, more often than not, requires more RRSP loans in the future if a person is intent on funding their RRSP each year. A cycle of debt is created – this is bad. See, if you’re required to make loan payments on this year’s loan, then you’re most likely not setting money aside for next year’s RRSP contribution. If you had set aside the money in the first place, then there would not have been any reason for you to have taken out an RRSP loan. Following this logic, when next year’s RRSP season rolls around, then you’ll be more inclined to take out another loan to make your next contribution.
This is an ass-backwards way to set aside money for the future. Yes – make the RRSP contribution. No – do not go into debt to do it!
“So what’s your bright idea, Blue Lobster?” you ask.
It’s simple. Go to any bank’s RRSP loan calculator and enter your numbers. The calculator will spit out a loan payment amount. I want you to set up a transfer from your bank account to your RRSP in the amount of the loan payment. Maybe the calculator spits out a payment amount of $500/mth. If your budget can accommodate this number, great – contribute $500 to your RRSP every month like clockwork. Maybe your budget can only tolerate a monthly hit of $350. That’s fine too – you’ll contribute $350 to your RRSP each month.
The point is that instead of paying money and interest to the bank, I want you to contribute that money to your RRSP. If you were willing to pay the bank some interest for the privilege of borrowing money, then I see no reason why you won’t make interest-free payments to yourself.
Either way, you’ll be setting aside money for your future. Why not do so without going into debt?