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Top 15 Things You Can Do During a Credit Crunch
- Personal Finance 101: When mom told you to
save for a rainy day, she was right, and this might be
it. If you aren't positioned for six to eight months
of "safety cash", now is the time to put that in
place.
- Assess Your State: State of emergency or
Stable condition? If you don't have a good handle on
your financial condition, check it out now. Review
your cash flow, personal balance sheet and budget and
get on the right side of debt management—more assets
than liabilities.
- Cash is King: If you are sitting on excess
cash be ready to do two things (a) pay down bad
debt—credit cards, non-deductible debt next
(mortgages). Then get ready to invest back into the
market at "sale prices" when the time is right
- Get Your Investment Priorities Right: What
comes first this year: your RRSP contribution? The new
Tax Free Savings Account, Investments in RESPs?
Non-registered accounts?
- Need Cash? Look in the right places: the
tax system is a good place to start: unfiled tax
returns, errors or omissions on prior returns leading
to refunds. Don't cash in RRSPs if you can help
it—will cause a tax problem.
- Be More Productive: You can get a second
job or start a business working out of your home—a
good way to save money on gas and coffee breaks—but
either way cut back on work-related expenses.
- Avoid Overpaying Tax Instalments: Will your
income be lower in 2008 than it was last year? Can you
avoid making the December 15 instalment payment? Write
CRA a letter to do so.
- Take Advantage of Tax Losses: Whether you
panicked and locked in losses, or generated them as
part of your year end planning strategies check out
your cash flow advantages by carrying back losses to
offset gains of the previous 3 hot years in the
marketplace.
- Reconsider your charitable donations? You
can often generate fast cash on your tax return by
increasing donations before year end.
- Defer Income. Put off taking income 'til
next year, to minimize tax and instalment payments for
next year. Problem: seniors and RRIFs. Stop drawing if
you have met your minimum withdrawal requirements
- Increase social benefit payments: Reducing
your net income with an RRSP contribution, could
decrease OAS Clawbacks, increase Child Tax Benefits.
In both cases you'll have a monthly cash flow bonus.
- Buy assets? Interest rates are coming
down—sit tight and see whether there are opportunities
to leverage into sale prices on homes, cars,
commercial buildings. If you are in business that will
increase your write-offs too.
- Manage the credit crunch with deductible
interest: Know your options when you are in
trouble: deducting interest on assets with diminishing
value, CRA garnishees, foreclosures, repossessions.
Get professional help
- Stress happens—write off prescriptions.
Getting extra therapeutic massages, taking more
prescription drugs? Do you know what medical expenses
to write off? Do you have your will up-to-date?
- Year end planning: reconsider education
savings: disadvantage in RESPs? Switch to TFSAs for
better flexibility?
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