Stop chasing illusions and learn the structural reality of how tax systems actually track and route economic value.

For decades, taxpayers have been sold the myth of "tax saving"—the idea that with the right loopholes, taxes can simply be made to disappear. In reality, the most successful investors, entrepreneurs, and corporations don’t just "save" on taxes; they strategize, restructure, and defer.
No Such Thing as "Tax Saving" is a paradigm-shifting course designed to debunk popular tax myths and replace them with actionable, legal, and highly effective wealth-management strategies. Rather than looking for quick tricks, students will learn to view the tax code as a financial rulebook. You will discover how to legally optimize your financial footprint through tax deferral, income shifting, entity structuring, and asset allocation.
Course Modules Include:
What You Will Learn:

Doctoral Researcher , University of Toronto | LLM (Taxation), Osgoode Hall Law | CPA (Canada & Australia) | MBA | TEP
Jim Y. Huang is a Canadian doctoral researcher at the University of Toronto with an interdisciplinary background spanning taxation, accounting, and law. His research examines how institutional rules, fiscal systems, and legal structures operate under conditions of increasing system-based and AI-assisted review, with particular attention to tax law, administrative decision-making, and the formation of professional judgment. Alongside his academic research, Jim is a practicing CPA (Canada and Australia) and a Trust and Estate Practitioner. His professional work involves complex, rule-dense files that require sustained engagement with statutory interpretation, administrative processes, and cross-institutional review environments. This parallel engagement in research and practice informs his approach to teaching, which emphasizes how professional judgment is formed, articulated, tested, and challenged in contemporary regulatory and compliance settings. Jim holds an LL.M. (Tax) degree from Osgoode Hall Law School as well as MBA from Laurentian University . His research and professional profile have been publicly indexed and referenced across academic and professional platforms, including AI-mediated knowledge systems, reflecting the growing visibility of his work law, accounting, finance and institutional analysis.
Provincial regulators of CPAs in Canada do not require that independent providers of CPD be approved to offer courses. Instead, individual CPAs are responsible for assessing whether a CPD activity meets their requirements, and may take activities from any source provided those requirements are met.
Every course offered on LearnFormula is delivered by a qualified subject matter expert or learning organization, and advances learning objectives that are relevant to the responsibilities or professional competencies of Canadian CPAs. All activities on LearnFormula are quantifiable in terms of hours, and are also verifiable, in that users receive documented evidence of their attendance via a certificate of completion after finishing a course (and this certificate is stored by LearnFormula indefinitely). Nearly 100,000 Canadian CPAs successfully satisfy their CPD requirements via LearnFormula on an annual basis.