Thank you.
Thank you, Mr. Chair and members of the committee.
I reviewed parts of the debate in the House during second reading, and there were a number of positions that I wish to address here.
One of the comments made in the debates was that voluntary savings vehicles such as RRSPs and TFSAs are adequate to enable people to save for their retirement. While this is true for the well off, with sufficient funds to invest, it is not true for middle-income families and certainly not for lower-income people. The net result cited by various researchers is that nearly a quarter of middle-income workers will sustain a substantial drop in their standard of living upon retirement because they have not, or could not, save enough.
It was also said that the CPP contribution is a payroll tax that will cause job losses. The same argument was made when the contribution rates were doubled in 1986 with no attendant increases in benefits, and there were no job losses then. There's no evidence that job losses will happen this time either.
There was a comment that employers will be paying thousands of dollars more. The absolute maximum additional contribution payable by an employer is $1,100 in today's dollars and is not payable until the increases are fully phased in, in 2025, and only in relation to a person earning approximately $82,700. To raise the fear that small businesses will be burdened with thousands of such payments is unwarranted. Average incomes are closer to $55,000, which is the YMPE today. In 2025 the annual employer contribution would be $515 a year, or $43 a month, or less than $20 per paycheque. As to the job loss argument, why would an employer terminate an employee over a $20 impact on their paycheque?
Another comment made was that low-income workers would lose their GIS benefits due to an increased CPP. Low-wage earners should absolutely participate in the increased CPP, even if their income supplements are replaced by CPP benefits, not least because of the dignity of having paid for one's own retirement. The increased WITB is a much-welcomed measure to ensure that low-wage earners can participate. If the legislators are concerned about low-income earners, they can exempt the increased CPP benefits from the GIS calculation.
Finally, it is often said that our children should not have to pay for our retirement. This concern is actually prevented by the CPP legislation: all future benefit increases must be fully funded. Each generation is funding its own retirement in relation to these increases. Furthermore, as with all large, well-managed defined benefit pension plans, contributions pay for about 20% of the benefits that are ultimately paid. The rest is funded from the investment returns.
Those are our recommendations. We'd be pleased to take your questions.