Thank you, Mr. Chair.
My name is Dean Connor. I'm the chief operating officer of Sun Life Financial. It's my pleasure to be here today on behalf of the Canadian Life and Health Insurance Association, along with Frank Swedlove, the president of the association.
The Canadian life and health insurance industry commends the standing committee for its focus on retirement income security. We very much share your interest. This is an area that is highly meaningful to our customers, about 26 million Canadians who rely on us for financial security, whether it be through life and health insurance or lifetime income solutions that we offer through pensions, annuities, RRSPs, and RRIFs. Over two-thirds of Canada's pension plans are administered by the industry.
As an industry, we have been giving this a lot of thought, both in terms of serving our customers and staying abreast of their changing needs, but also in terms of the role that we play and the contribution that we make to the broader fabric of Canadian society.
Today, we would like to focus on the adequacy of retirement savings.
According to the 2009 Melbourne Mercer Global Pension Index, Canada's retirement savings system has only three peers: Australia's, the Netherlands', and Sweden's. This success has been predicated on the complementary relationship between government and private plans.
In this regard, we often talk about the three pillars of retirement savings. The government, of course, makes up the first two pillars, with old age security-GIS and the Canada and Quebec Pension Plans. It's our view that the role of the government in Canada's retirement savings system should be to ensure that all Canadians receive a level of income that meets their basic needs in retirement. We believe these first two pillars, the public part of our retirement savings system, are working well.
The third pillar is a combination of workplace pensions and other retirement plans, individual RRSPs, and individual savings. This third pillar is meant to provide a level of income adequacy that goes beyond the basics.
Structurally, we have a healthy third pillar: there is a wide range of products available, through a wide range of providers; it's a very competitive marketplace; there are strong tax incentives. But many Canadians are not sufficiently engaged, and some are not engaged at all. Sometimes this is by choice and sometimes it's through a lack of access.
When it comes to workplace retirement plans, there's a fair bit of inconsistency, which breaks down between the public and private sectors and between large and small employers. About eight million workers out of a total workforce of fourteen million have access to some kind of workplace pension plan. Five million are covered by defined benefit or DB plans. About 1.3 million Canadians are covered by workplace defined contribution plans, and two million are covered by workplace group RRSPs, which are less administratively complex than DC plans.
In the public sector, 90% of workers are covered by workplace retirement plans, and these are usually DB. When it comes to the private sector, however, only 50% of workers have access to some kind of workplace retirement plan.
In the private sector, there is a shift under way—and it's been going on for many years—from DB plans to DC plans or group RRSPs. This is in fact a global shift. It's driven by funding costs and by the risks and complexities of DB plans, which make them increasingly challenging for employers to sponsor.
The insurance industry believes there are reasonable steps that can go a long way to improving our retirement savings system. We join others first in believing that there should be a good look at the rules around RRSPs. We believe that expanding the definition of earned income to capture such things as royalties and active business income would be more inclusive of self-employed Canadians. In addition, extending the age at which Canadians must start withdrawing from their RRSPs and other pension vehicles from 71 to 73 years would allow those who are still working to continue to build up their retirement savings. Some countries have gone further. For example, in the U.K. pensions don't need to be started until age 75.
A second area that we believe could make a huge difference to Canadians is improving access to workplace pensions. The main impediments for employers right now are costs and administrative complexities. This is especially so for small employers.
We recommend that governments allow multi-employer pension plans that are set up as DC plans, or DC-MEPPs, whereby a regulated financial institution acts as the sponsor and administrator and any employer may join. It spares the employer almost all of the administrative costs and compliance burdens, except for payroll deductions. And because multiple employers could participate in the same plan, there would be significant economies of scale.
Employees would be automatically enrolled but would be permitted to opt out. As well, legislation should permit auto-escalation, whereby a plan could start members out at a base contribution rate, with an automatic increase in subsequent years until the desired target level of contribution was reached. Employers could match employee contributions or choose not to contribute.
For those employers who offer group RRSPs, the current impediment to maximizing retirement savings is that contributions to these plans are not locked in for retirement but can be withdrawn. We recommend employer contributions to group RRSPs be locked in to ensure they are meeting the objective of providing retirement income.
All these changes to private pensions: auto-enrolment, auto-escalation, multi-employer plans, and locking in employer contributions to group RRSPs are relatively simple and positive steps forward that would build up our third pillar of retirement savings in a way that few would oppose.
I'll wrap up with a few last comments. While the life and health insurance industry supports the public system for providing a basic level of pension, it does not support massive new government-run programs. Whether these programs are a DC top-up to the CPP/QPP or a whole new government-sponsored plan, in our view such plans would only replicate what is already done in the private sector.
In summary, in the view of the life and health insurance industry, we have a structure of saving for retirement that is sound and internationally recognized as such. What we need to do is find mechanisms to allow more Canadians to take advantage of what's already available. Our proposal is to free up the RRSP market and make workplace retirement plans more accessible to workers. We think this is the best way to achieve those objectives.
Thank you, Mr. Chairman.