Hub Blogs

Hub Blogs contains fresh contributions written by Financial Independence Hub staff or contributors that have not appeared elsewhere first, or have been modified or customized for the Hub by the original blogger. In contrast, Top Blogs shows links to the best external financial blogs around the world.

Men and women approach taxes & investing differently

By Gennaro De Luca

Special to the Financial Independence Hub

Anyone who is in financial services, and especially wealth management, knows there are big differences between men and women in terms of how they invest. But what isn’t as well known is that there are also big differences between men and women when they do their tax returns.

I started working at a bank at the age of 19, have been in financial services since 1990, and have spent the past 18 years in wealth management. But I also have a company that specializes in doing tax returns for small businesses, families and students. All this experience has provided a lot of insight into how men and women differ when it comes to financial matters.

Let’s first look at tax returns. Nine times out of ten it is the woman who takes the bull by the horns to get the family’s taxes done. Women tend to be more involved and are much more apt to ask questions of their accountant or tax preparer. Men may not ask any questions at all; they just hand over their documents and see you later.

What kind of questions am I talking about? Women want to know things like this:

  • What kind of tax credits are we eligible for?
  • Are there any government benefits we are eligible for?

That latter point is especially important for women who have small children. Indeed, many young families are really squeezed nowadays, so every opportunity for a tax break is vital.

Here is a perfect example from a client that illustrates what I mean. The woman is a teacher who could claim certain expenses for driving her car to work. Her husband is not a teacher, but does work for an employer. She asked us if her husband is also eligible for this same deduction because, like her, he drives a car for his employer and has lots of expenses.

As it turned out, he was eligible for what is known as a T2200, which is a declaration of conditions of employment –- effectively work-related expenses –- and in his case it meant deductions of $10,475, which resulted in a tax saving of over $3,000 on his tax return. But if his wife had never asked the question, none of this would have been claimed.

Men are more resistant to change

Another difference with doing taxes concerns technology. Today more than 80% of tax returns in Canada are done digitally, Continue Reading…

Making Canada great again

By Trevor Parry

Special to the Financial Independence Hub

I have to apologize to my CFL fan friends, particularly in Saskatchewan, where I have found it the rule rather than the exception to find a shrine to the fabled “Riders” in clear site in most offices.  The game just doesn’t do it for me.  The one, two punt monotony of the game isn’t overcome by the stoic resolution to play in Stalingrad like conditions on the Prairie in late fall.

With his second foray into Budget making, Finance Minister Bill Morneau’s attempt must be described as nothing more than a punt.  In this instance they have kicked away the ball to see what the offense south of the border will do.  For fiscal conservatives, who believe budgets should only go into deficit when faced with financial calamity, rather than to send the swag to the long list of Liberal sacred cows, pet projects and friendly consultants, this Budget was more of the same Keynesian dirge, although with veiled threats of further confiscation of wealth.  Certainly Prince Justin and LSE alumni Billy are taking marching orders from the reconstituted politburo to lay low and wait to see what The Donald can get through.

The Trump tax reform package, which despite the recent  (and what I am sure will be a temporary) hiccup in repealing and replacing Obamacare, will likely enjoy complete GOP support and support of Democrats concerned about re-election in 2018,  is the most ambitious tax plan to see the light of day since the days of Ronaldus Magnus.  It puts the Trudeauopian punitive “tax the hell out of everyone who wants to save 10 cents” dictum in definite jeopardy.  It would reduce all tax rates, including the top rate down to 33% from to 39.60%.

Canadian top tax rates kick in at just $200,000, half that of the US

Canadians should know that the top bracket in the US doesn’t kick in until you hit an income of US$418,000 as an individual, $470,700 if you file jointly and $444,550 if you file as a head of household with dependents.  Remember the Little Prince cancelled the miniscule Family Tax Cut ($2k) professing claims of “fairness”.  Canadian top rates kick in at C$200,000.

Continue Reading…

Banks, Blockchain & Economic Liberty: A follow-up

By Adam Goldman

I wrote a piece last September titled Why Our Economic Liberty Depends on the Blockchain, providing an analysis on why I am certain distributed ledger technology is important to securing our rights under the law in the digital age.

In an ever-increasing realm of technology that is meant to improve (in positive ways) facets of our lives, the imperfection of humanity still exists while greed heavily plagues the banking world. As a firm advocate for the rule of law, I find recent revelations by CBC’s Go Public , that highlighted rampant fraudulent activity occurring amongst Canada’s largest financial institutions (TD, BMO, RBC, CIBC, and Scotiabank) disturbing to say the least.

‘This is why the only solution really is to have government step in and look after the Canadian people.’ says lobbyist Stan Buell as quoted in the CBC article.

Ultimately directives from above led to not only immoral, but also illegal tactics that chased their bottoms lines. Adding more bureaucracy at a government level will only exacerbate the climate.

Blockchain is the answer, not government

In my previous article I had given several broad examples of current institutions that could improve themselves, one being quasi-relevant to the financial fraud currently being exposed in Canada.

Continue Reading…

How Small Businesses can leverage SEO & the Internet for marketing

By Mike Carroll

(Sponsored Content)

Big company or small, marketing isn’t what it used to be. In fact, it isn’t what it was last week. Marketing and sales are so tied to technology that they are evolving almost faster than you can manage.

So businesses move quickly to find the consultant or manager to assume the demands of SEO, SEM, social media, and more of the contemporary tools available. Businesses simply don’t have the time or experience to optimize the business’s branding and identity.

What to look for?

Small businesses, perhaps through cost concerns, make the mistake of leaving these issues to an employee with some internet experience or some third party tech-savvy freelancer.

What they need is a full service consultancy, experienced in the intricate and specific tools and capabilities. You want experts who are ahead of the curve in technology and content. You want the firm with a demonstrated history of building and optimizing traffic to a company’s website.

What you want is a higher ranking for your website that sells candy. You want your Sweet Services online store to appear early when people use their browsers. The higher it appears, the more likely your site is to sell. Boosting your ranking takes skill and real time management.

Search Rankings

Adam Heitzman wrote in Inc.com that no one and no SEO firm can guarantee you #1 rankings. You can’t take the SEO firm’s word for it, but you can demand they show proof of what they have done for other customers.

Expertise

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Why it’s NOT okay to be in debt when approaching Retirement

By Douglas Hoyes

Special to the Financial Independence Hub

While we all strive for a Victory Lap leading to our Findependence, a growing number of Canadians can only dream about getting out of debt.

Every two years my firm, Hoyes, Michalos & Associates Inc., releases our Joe Debtor report, where we profile our clients who have filed a bankruptcy or a consumer proposal.  In our report two years ago we reported that seniors are the fastest growing risk group for insolvency, and that’s still the case today.

Almost one in five insolvencies involve pre-retirement debtors in their 50s, and more than one in 10 (12%) involve seniors in their 60s and 70s.

What’s the problem?  Shouldn’t older Canadians have a lifetime of savings to rely on as they enter their Victory Lap?  Many do.  If you had a well-paying stable job that allowed you to save and build assets,  have an employer-provided pension, or have been fortunate enough to own a house during the current real estate boom, you are probably in great shape heading into your golden years.

Many over 50s still have dependents

However, not everyone in the over 50 crowd is as fortunate.  Continue Reading…