Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
Minister Menzies, thank you for being here with your staff and your family. Welcome to you and to them.
I have to tell you that I'm disappointed we weren't able to do more in terms of the CPP. I had the opportunity in a previous life to visit an awful lot of employers throughout Nova Scotia and Newfoundland and Labrador, where the workplaces had defined contribution plans or group RRSPs. I saw workers with 35 years in getting ready to retire, and as a result of the downturn in the economy, they lost hundreds of thousands of dollars in their pensions over six or eight months. I watched these grown men and women cry because of the insecurity of that form of investment.
I think we can do better. I talked to one of the provincial finance ministers during some of these negotiations. I understand there was one province that was a holdout. I wish the federal government could do more on this. I don't see this as anything more than having private plans out there that are completely subject to the market. Increased competition will mean more plans, more administration, and more costs. Ultimately it's not going to do what you state we're trying to do.
I want to again say that on the whole question of the CPP and what makes it work, it seems like a health benefit plan. It's mandatory, people have to participate, it's guaranteed that way, it's properly funded, and it's well administered. It's just like a health benefit plan, cafeteria style. It gives people choice. That's how it's sold. All of the healthy people pick a few items in that lineup, and the people who end up needing it don't have the coverage. The costs are increased for the people who do need the plan.
I really have a number of concerns with this. I don't think we're doing anything to try to deal with the whole question of retirement income security. We have the CPP fully funded for 75 years. I just think we could have done a whole lot more as a country and a government that's being lauded for the work it has done with the CPP.
I urge you and your colleagues to go back to the drawing board and try to pull something together on the CPP. I think there's a will out there among provincial governments.