Philanthropic Giving in Canada Part 5

Example: The Gift that Keeps on Giving

 Assume you are considering making a charitable gift of $1 million.  If you made that gift today, you would receive an income tax credit for this amount and receive a refund of $500,000, leaving a net cost of $500,000.

You could also just make a gift today of $250,000 and buy a prescribed life annuity with the remaining $750,000.  With the annual payments from the annuity, you could fund a permanent joint life insurance policy on the lives of yourself and your spouse for a much larger amount.  The charity would then benefit from this if gifted at second death. This is how it would work in your case:

 

Step

Impact to You

Benefits to Charity

  1. Give a gift of $250,000 today.
Receive tax refund of $125,0001 Immediate gift of $250,000
  1. Buy a joint-life, prescribed annuity for $750,000.
Receive annual after-tax payments of $40,000 for life2 N/A
  1. Buy a Participating, permanent joint life insurance policy for $549,000 and fund 15 annual premiums from the annuity payments.3
Life insurance coverage with growing estate benefit and growing cash value. N/A
  1. From year 16 onward, donate the annual annuity payments to charity.
Receive annual tax refunds of $20,000. Ongoing annual gifts of $40,000 from year 16 until both of you have deceased.
  1. Upon second death, donate the estimated $1.7 million estate benefit of the life insurance policy4 to charity.
Estate receives a tax refund of $850,000. Charity receives a final gift of $1.7 million.

 

If we assume you both pass away at age 90, under this strategy you will have made gifts of $2,550,000 throughout your remaining lifetime rather than $1,000,000 today.  Your net cost would actually be a gain of $275,000. This doesn’t seem possible. One reason is this analysis doesn’t take into account the time value of money.  If we discount all cash flows at 2.5% after-tax, it breaks down like this:

 

Net Cost of Your Gift

Present Value @ 2.5%

Initial one-time donation

$1,000,000

$1,000,000

Initial tax refund

$125,000

$125,000

Tax refunds from years 16-30

$300,000

$175,253

Tax refund on insurance estate benefit

$850,000

$415,362

Total cost

($275,000)

$284,385

 

Let’s see how this plays out for the charity.

 

Gift to Charity

Present Value @ 2.5%

Initial one-time gift

$250,000

$250,000

Annual gifts from years 16-30

$600,000

$350,506

Gift of insurance estate benefit

$1,700,000

$830,724

Total Charitable Gift

$2,550,000

$1,431,230

 

In summary, this strategy comes with a lower net cost to you and a larger gift to the charity.

[1]2015 combined Federal and Ontario Tax Brackets including Surtaxes at taxable income of $220,000 is 49.53% rounded to 50% for this example

2This assumes joint a joint and survivor life annuity for a male aged 71 and a female aged 61. Actual amounts will vary.

3This assumes a joint last-to-die Sun Par Protector policy which would be fully funded after 15 years at the current dividend interest rate less 1.0%.

4This assumes the current dividend interest rate less 1.0% and a claim in year 30.