Canadian government responds to TEI submission on GST credits for pension plan sponsors.

AuthorMazankowski, Donald
PositionTax Executives Institute, Goods and Services Tax

On June 26, 1992, Tax Executives Institute submitted a letter to Donald Mazankowski, Canadian Minister of Finance, regarding the eligibility of employers to claim input tax credits for Goods and Services Tax (GST) paid to suppliers of services necessary to administer employer-sponsored pension plans. The Institute's comments were reprinted in the July-August 1992 issue of The Tax Executive. On November 12, 1992, the Minister of Finance responded to the Institute's submission, and his response (which took the form of a letter to J. Lawrence Martin, TEI's Vice President for Canadian Affairs) is reprinted below:

I am writing in response to Mr. Reginald W. Kowalchuk's letter of June 26, 1992, concerning the eligibility of pension plan sponsors to claim input tax credits for GST paid on services used in the course of administering employer-sponsored pension plans. Mr. Kowalchuk requested that we reply to your predecessor Mr. Andrew G. Kenyon.

Mr. Kowalchuk states in his letter that a "core principle of the GST [is] that businesses should be relieved of GST on all costs incurred in their commercial activities." This statement provides a general summary of policy underlying the GST. However, a more precise statement of the government's policy is that a core principle of the GST is that, in general, businesses should be relieved of GST on inputs to the extent that inputs are used in making taxable supplies. As a result, mixed suppliers -- i.e., persons who make both exempt and taxable supplies -- are required to attribute input tax to three baskets: a basket for inputs used exclusively in making exempt supplies which will be ineligible for ITCs, a basket used in making exclusively taxable supplies which will be eligible for ITCs, and a basket for mixed-use inputs which will be eligible for ITCs to the extent of use in commercial activities.

Mr. Kowalchuk suggests in his letter that all inputs in respect of a company's employee pension plan are "in furtherance of" its commercial activities and, are therefore, eligible for input tax...

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