Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
On behalf of the 3.2 million members of the Canadian Labour Congress, I thank you for the opportunity to present our views on pension issues. However, I should point out that we actually had to barge our way into this meeting, as someone forgot to invite the representative of 3.2 million workers. In fact, 83% of all registered private sector pension plans come under our affiliates.
Let's begin by reflecting on why pensions are an important issue today. The reason, quite clearly, is the current economic crisis. The crisis has exposed the weakness of our pension system, but it's also seen employers claim that pension rules are onerous and challenging to the operations of their businesses.
Honourable members of this committee, these employers' claims must be taken with a large grain of salt. Even today, in the midst of serious economic challenges, most Canadian employers—and I'll say it again—don't have a wealth problem. What we have is a wealth distribution problem and a pension fairness problem.
We have a pension system that rewards executives and shortchanges workers' pensions, and that system must be changed. We have a country where the top 100 employers dole out an average pension to their managers of $930,000 a year. Meanwhile, workers are told to take less or even to fend for themselves.
We have a federal economic action plan that values tiny personal tax cuts and huge corporate tax cuts over protecting good jobs and creating pension security for workers.
We have bankruptcy laws that allow rich creditors to pillage workers' hard-earned pensions. Last week this committee heard from forestry workers in Quebec that workers at AbitibiBowater in Grand Falls learned that 2,500 creditors ranked ahead of them in bankruptcy court. These creditors, largely banks and hedge funds, have filed 60,000 pages of documents to recover their losses. Meanwhile, workers at AbitibiBowater are owed between $30,000 and $100,000 each in severance pay. There are 87-year-old widows who won't see a dime of their former husbands' pensions.
We have a federal pension system that allowed Canada Post to take a contribution holiday ten months into this current economic crisis. The same system gave solvency funding relief to Air Canada in 2004, only to see the company reward executives, sell off all their assets, pay out huge dividends to shareholders, and underfund workers' pensions, and now once again is sitting there crying poverty.
We have management fees for defined contribution plans and RRSPs that gouge 30% to 40% from a worker's expected pension. We're talking about billions of dollars being diverted into the deep pockets of Bay Street.
We have studies that show most Canadian employers can pay for today's pension deficiencies. This is true for many large federal sector employers, who are in a good position relative to others.
Still, today we hear calls for weaker pension funding rules at the worst possible time.
As I said before and will say again, a decent pension for all is not impossible. Even in today's economy, it's not impossible. It can happen if we embrace the right pension values and if the policy ideas that we use fit those values. Our recent brief to the finance committee on pensions shows how it can happen.
I'll just end with a summary of our demands.
We say no to unnecessary pension bailouts. Of course we should assist employers with genuine problems and use the government's existing extraordinary financing framework of some $200 billion, as announced in the federal budget, to do that.
We should set a policy goal to double CPP and QPP pension benefits, and allow them to gradually replace the under-performing RRSP industry—which, I might add, uses up $19 billion a year in tax credits, or about half of what we spend on OAS, if you can believe it. And we should increase OAS benefits so that no senior lives in poverty ever again in this country.
We need to create a federal system of pension insurance that mirrors the system for bank deposits and credit union deposits. This fund should be financed through levies from pension plan sponsors themselves. And we should create a reserve fund for this insurance system through a small financial transfer tax on Canadian stock market trades.
Critically, for the sake of genuine fairness, we need to ensure that the full value of workers' pensions is protected in bankruptcy proceedings. If Canadians shouldn't be in the front of the line when it comes to protecting them, who should be?
Thank you.