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Canadian Medical Residency Guide - Taking control of your future medical career and financial life

Section B

Money After Medical School

Your Financial Life

Saving for Your Future

At this early stage of your medical career, your primary focus is probably on reducing your debt. While this is certainly an important objective, now is also the best time in your life to start building wealth for your future. And while it may seem that you have no excess funds and that investing is a far-off goal, a review of your budget and your spending habits might prove otherwise. You can start to invest with as little as $25 per month.

As a younger investor, you can take maximum advantage of two of the most powerful wealth-building tools available: time and compounding. Even small amounts set aside regularly at this stage can grow to a significant sum over time.

Although your salary as a resident will be relatively modest compared with what you’ll earn later in your career, you can use time to your advantage and make the most of your earnings. And developing a commitment to savings at this stage in your career is a habit that will stay with you and enhance your long-term financial security as you move through the different stages of your career.

Where to begin? By focusing on three simple strategies, you’ll find yourself well on your way to a secure financial future:

As a student or resident, your retirement is easily 30 or 40 years away. In fact, you probably haven’t given it much thought.

But even though retirement is not top of mind, you should definitely be thinking about contributing to a registered Retirement Savings Plan (RSP). An RSP is one of the best tax breaks available to Canadian wage-earners, and a powerful saving tool.

An RSP provides two main advantages:

  • Tax-deductible contributions. You can deduct the amount of your RSP contribution from your income in the current year. A $1,000 contribution will generate a tax benefit of $300 if your marginal tax rate is 30%.
  • Tax-sheltered investment earnings. The investment income you earn inside your RSP isn’t taxed until it’s withdrawn. Because the earnings compound tax-deferred, they grow much more quickly than in a non-registered account. And starting early pays off. The more time you have to benefit from the tax-sheltered growth, the more quickly your savings will grow.

There are limits on the amount you can contribute to an RSP each year. For 2011, your RSP contribution limit is 18% of your 2010 earned income or $22,450, whichever is less, minus any pension adjustment if you were employed and participated in your employer's pension plan in 2008. If you can’t contribute the maximum, the unused contribution room can be carried forward indefinitely, increasing the amount you’re allowed to contribute in future years.

In addition, your RSP doesn’t have to be just for retirement — it can also help you buy your first home. Under the Home Buyers’ Plan, first-time homebuyers can withdraw up to $25,000, tax-free, from their RSPs to buy or build a home. For a couple, that can mean $50,000 toward their first home.

Some restrictions apply, and the amount must be repaid over 15 years. If you miss a repayment, that amount will be included in your taxable income for the year.

You may also withdraw from your RSP up to $10,000 per year, tax-free, to a maximum of $20,000 in total, under the Lifelong Learning Plan, to finance full-time training or postsecondary education for yourself or your spouse. The withdrawals can only be made over a maximum period of four calendar years. The amount withdrawn from your RSP should be repaid over a 10-year period.
 

Download Section B, Your Financial Life, in its entirety.

Download the complete 2011/2012 Canadian Medical Residency Guide for FREE.

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