Investment Executive<\/em> first sounded the alarm about the bare trust legislation more than two years ago,<\/a> highlighting how many people could have these arrangements without being aware of them due to the proposal’s broad language. Tax experts asked Finance to narrow its focus to the structures it found problematic. Despite the warning and further entreaties from tax professionals<\/a>, the legislation passed in late 2022 without substantial changes<\/a>.<\/p>\n
The CRA then had to implement the flawed rules<\/a>, and they seem to be having trouble squaring the circle<\/a> \u2014 and not for the first time. Mere hours before the Oct. 31, 2023 deadline for filing the underused housing tax return without penalty, the CRA granted taxpayers a second extension<\/a> to April 30, 2024.<\/p>\n
There are financial consequences too: wasted fees paid for what’s now an unlikely filing requirement, wage pressures on small accounting businesses, and the unquantifiable, but very real, stress placed on thousands of Canadians. Many accountants believe<\/a> they will be unable to charge their clients for bare trust returns still in progress and even for returns already filed.<\/p>\n