A group of pension experts, including a former chief actuary of the Canada Pension Plan, is calling on Canada’s finance ministers to commit to expanding the CPP.
In an open letter to Finance Minister Jim Flaherty and his provincial and territorial counterparts, the group said a growing body of research indicates that many Canadians will likely have inadequate savings to maintain their standard of living in retirement.
The signatories include Bernard Dussault, the CPP’s former chief actuary; Bob Baldwin, an expert adviser for the Ontario Expert Commission on Pensions; Keith Horner, a pensions consultant and a former federal Finance Department official; Jonathan Rhys Kesselman, the Canada research chair in public finance at Simon Fraser University; Monica Townson, an economic consultant who served on the Pension Commission of Ontario, and Michael Wolfson, the Canada research chair in population health modelling/populomics at the University of Ottawa.
Canada’s finance ministers are to meet in Victoria next week to discuss Ottawa’s proposed pooled registered pension plan framework, the triennial review of the CPP and the state of the economy.
In place of expanding the CPP, Ottawa has tabled legislation on pooled registered pension plans—which has been met with both praise and criticism. Those in favour of the legislation say that it enables small businesses to offer an affordable and easy-to-manage pension plan to their employees. However, critics say Canadians already have similar savings programs, such as registered retirement savings plans and the tax-free savings plan, which aren’t being fully utilized.