Thank you.
This discussion about the CPP and QPP is interesting. I would say its value lies in the fact that it is a single fund. That keeps down the cost of managing and investing that money. Because of the size and the scope, the investment strategies are sufficiently balanced to ensure that the risk is minimized and yet return is maximized.
With that risk ratio taken into account, it's also the case that the risk is shared among the contributors as well as government. On the other side, our primary concerns with this strategy are that it's a bunch of smaller savings plans and they get bigger from time to time and there's no control over the costs. Some people think that maybe competition will do it, keep those fees under control, but who knows? And the risk is going to be borne solely by the employees.
So those ultimately are some of our concerns. I wanted to respond to that, but I also wanted to ask the CFIB a couple of questions.
I come from a small-business background. I'm from rural Nova Scotia. My family and the people I love and the people I live around are all small-business people. What's important to them is that the people in their community have money to spend, to buy insurance, to buy homes, to buy stuff at the corner store. For example, it's important that we look for strategies for retirement income that ensure that people are able to save in the most effective and efficient ways with some sense of guarantee, taking the risk out of it as much as possible.
Mr. Kelly, if we continually look for strategies that simply take out the cost and shift the burden onto those individuals, my concern is that for those small businesses I'm close to, my family and the people in my community, we're going to have a problem with disposable income in our communities. As you said, your members are the backbone of the economy and so on, but they need people to be able to come into their stores and buy their goods. So we need to make sure there are jobs, that there is income replacement when people lose their jobs or retire. So I'm concerned with how we're going to be able to do this in a way that makes the most sense and that doesn't simply absolve your members and other members of our community of some responsibility for making sure we all participate in keeping the economy going.