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Tax-free Savings Accounts [Paperback]

Gordon Pape
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)
List Price: CDN$ 16.00
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Book Description

Jan 12 2009 0143171968 978-0143171966
This may be of the most important little investment book you'll ever read! Financial expert Gordon Pape explains the new Tax-Free Savings Account (TFSA)--the powerful new personal savings vehicle for Canadians - and provides a range of strategies that you can use to add thousands of tax-exempt dollars to your personal wealth.

As of January, 2009, everyone 18 and older can contribute to a TFSA and start building your tax-free investments. This indispensible primer will help you get started on meeting your financial goals with the most valuable new savings program since the introduction of RRSPs more than 50 years ago. Pape clearly explains everything you need to know about Tax-Free Savings Accounts including:

* The advantages of a TFSA
* Contribution rules and limits
* The best investments for a TFSA
* TFSAs or RRSPs?
* Withdrawing money from a TFSA
* Using TFSAs for income splitting
* Tips to maximize tax savings
* How TFSAs can benefit retirees


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Tax-free Savings Accounts + Retirement's Harsh New Realities: Protecting Your Money in a Changing World + Millionaire Teacher: The Nine Rules of Wealth You Should Have Learned in School
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Product Description

Review

"Gordon Pape's explanation of Tax-Free Savings Accounts is informative and easy to grasp." -- John Lawrence Reynolds, author of The Naked Investor

"The tax-free savings account is a can't-miss opportunity and Gordon Pape has written the definitive manual on how to use it." -- Rob Carrick, Personal Finance Columnist, The Globe and Mail

Review

"Gordon Pape's explanation of Tax-Free Savings Accounts is informative and easy to grasp."


Customer Reviews

4.0 out of 5 stars
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Most helpful customer reviews
9 of 11 people found the following review helpful
1.0 out of 5 stars About getting old, not rich! Jan 29 2013
Format:Paperback
This book has nothing to do with getting rich. Rather, it's about getting old. In fact, Chapter 10 (only half way through the book) is entitled "Passing On," and is about what to do if you die before your investments have matured, and how to get ensure that your family gets the most of your money. The author even states "TFSAs can make you a millionaire! Not in one year, or five, or even ten. But if you're young enough stay with the plan, it certainly is an attainable goal."

One of the book's saddest moments is when he tells the (fictional) story of a 71-year old woman who opens a tax-free account because it's "never too late". She contributes 5500 a year for 5 years (27,500) and at the end of the term the author says, and I quote, "she has a tax-free nest egg of 31,911." Excuse me, but waiting until I'm 70 to save money on the draws I make on my RRSP by re-investing them into a TFSA at a dismal return of less than 4 thousand dollars over FIVE YEARS does not even begin to describe "rich."

Granted, this book does explain what a TFSA is (which you can look up for free on the government website or simply ask your bank, it's not rocket science) and then explains how compound interest works when applied to a nominal sum of money being contributed monthly and then letting it sit for an extended duration. It also explains some of the other uses for the account, such as stock investing, but fails time and time again to delve into substance and present any information of real use.

I guess by "rich" I was expecting some of this guidance, and tricks about how to maximize the returns, places to invest, not to invest, and how to ensure you maximise your income and your contribution, not have compound interest over 50 years explained dozens of times.

The pages were packed with tons of hypothetical situations showing how a, say, 6-15% return plus maximum contribution over 30-50 years looks (pretty good!) but little or no information about how to get there. He just says, when referring to stock portfolio management, for example, that you have to know what you are doing in the stock market and be comfortable with the risk. Hmm... Isn't this why I bought this book?! Care to share what you've learned? I guess not. (I think the reason here is because he doesn't know. His real money-making strategy is to sell hundreds of thousands of copies of "wealth-building" books. Where is the book that explains THIS with honestly? Perhaps I'll write it for him and reap the benefits.)

I guess if something seems too good to be true, it probably is.

TL;DR: About getting old, not rich. I want my 10 dollars back.
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0 of 2 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent but ...... Jan 4 2013
Format:Paperback
Really good and filled with info about TFSAs. Just an FYI though. I don't know about all banks but when I signed up with ScotiaBank to open a TFSA, they give this out for free to their customers.
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1 of 4 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent advice - up to date info Feb 15 2013
Format:Paperback|Amazon Verified Purchase
I'm not sure the title is entirely correct since you can't put that much into a TFSA currently but, if you are young, it could well be true.
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