Thank you, everybody, for coming.
At the last meeting I told the story of the wise king who determined the wisdom of the ages. He broke it down to one line, which was basically, “There is no free lunch”.
We've talked about defined contributions. We've talked about defined benefits.
Pensions fall, in the private sector, with SMEs or corporations. With corporations you will sometimes find defined benefit pensions. In the public sector there are primarily defined benefits.
In a perfect world, I suppose we would have a system in which the workers would pay x number of dollars. We'd determine what that was. Then the government would pay whatever on top of that, whether it was two or three times that. That would have to be determined. It would then fall upon the government, if there was a shortfall, to take the risk and to take the cost if there was a discrepancy at the end of a number of years or something.
It would be much like our health care. Our health care operates kind of that way. Whatever it costs, we foot the bill.
This would give—I think Mr. Benson would agree—our manufacturers an enormous advantage, because now we could go to corporations that operate across the borders, and we wouldn't have to offer them any pensions, because now our government would cover those as well. It would definitely do what the NDP wants to do, which is to level the playing field for all Canadians. The only problem, of course—and I do not have the figures—is that I estimate it would cost hundreds of billions of dollars. So it's a moot point.
Mr. Benson, you told me a number of years ago when we were talking about pensions on another issue that the Teamsters handle their own pensions. You have companies, of course, so you have to take that into consideration every time you negotiate a settlement. If there is going to be a problem, you don't want to bankrupt your company. I'm sure you have companies that come along and say they can't make the payments.
I'm probably telling you what you already know, so why don't you tell me and the committee what your company or what your Teamsters have done to avoid that situation, and how you have managed to handle that issue.