Thank you for the question. I want to assure the committee that we did do our due diligence in trying to model the impacts, and as I described to the other member, we do this from an economy-wide, enterprise-wide perspective in trying to understand both the behaviour of firms—not sector specific, as your quote alludes to—and also the behaviour of households as well, as they respond to this new policy change. I want to say that the results of our modelling are effectively congruent with those of the Conference Board and other people who are doing this type of analysis.
In trying to plainly state it, while there will be this short-term impact between year zero through 12, it would be a very modest short-term impact and an impact that would be mitigated by this long phase-in period to allow firms the opportunity to adjust wages, profits, and prices to the new CPP enhancement. Ultimately the short-term impact would be quite modest, as I stated in probably the most easily understood raw nominal value, which is about $1 billion on a $2.4 trillion economy.
That is not to dismiss it, but that negative impact would then dissipate after year 12, and the economy, from a total output perspective, would start to reap the benefits through increased consumption as a result of larger post-retirement incomes. You know the efficiency of the CPP vehicle, so people would be substituting their savings into a portable, efficient, low-management-fee plan.
I could go on, but this is what our models tell us, and as I said, our models are comparable to those of others who are scrutinizing it.