I can tell you, on a personal level, I've spent the last seven years—it will be eight years this December—criss-crossing this country, talking to anyone who cared to listen on why we should do this. The fact that we have done it is truly an amazing achievement on behalf of Canadians.
This will benefit young workers, those who are entering the workforce currently or are about to enter it in the next little while. More importantly, the 11 million Canadians I talked about will have the greatest benefit. For those individuals who work just as hard as I and my members do, they don't have a workplace pension. They rely on the CPP for their entire benefits. If they are fortunate enough to provide savings through whatever mechanism, kudos to them.
The reality is that our organization and activists see this as truly a remarkable achievement, given that they spent so much of their time campaigning for it. Of course, we would have liked to have seen the increase much higher, but the fact is that the increase is universal. Nobody is excluded. The positive thing for low-income Canadians is that it will cost them part of their salary and there's a tax credit to go with that.
Secondly, on the increase, allowing higher-income Canadians to pay on the higher salary is a positive thing. As you know, that was capped at around $52,000 a year. I think that's a significant improvement. Those Canadians will get a better benefit as a result of paying on a higher income. More importantly, this will be phased in over a period of time. Despite all the arguments that have been made, I have yet to see some of those realities happen. There is notice now that it will start in 2019 and will be phased in over a period of time. I think it will have little or no impact on the economy.
I also want to speak directly to the small businesses. Those individual owners who own those businesses are also people who need a pension when they retire. If they are fortunate enough to sell that business when they retire and are able to earn from that, so be it, but they also need a decent pension. The Canada pension plan provides them with an opportunity to save for their retirement.
The CPP is not a tax; it is a savings plan for all Canadians. We pool our investments together so that we can have a better benefit when we retire. Everything we know about the Canada pension plan is that it is 75 years solvent. It has a solid structure. More importantly, it's able to meet the obligation to ensure that every Canadian has a benefit when they do retire.
The last point I would make, and I say this coming back to the point of private pensions, is that every benefit that's been promised by the CPP has been paid. I know the challenges we face with private pensions because we negotiate them. If the company goes bankrupt or the plan is not fully funded, our members are directly impacted by that.
This is a good thing for the economy. It is a good thing that the province came together to support the federal government to do this across the country, so we don't have a piecemeal system happening.