Even I am ahead of Mr. Lawrence.
I'm sorry, Philip.
When we were dealing with this matter previously, our witness had talked about the appendix in the chief actuary officer's report that has an aspect of what we're getting at here. I want to explain why I believe our subamendment would go further.
Also, I would reiterate the point that the amendment itself is referring to a separate reporting requirement. This is referring to a report that must be prepared by the Minister of Finance on the projected impacts of the amendment on the Canada pension plan that's contained in this. We're not actually seeking an opportunity for the Minister to download these responsibilities onto the chief actuary. We're trying to ensure that we have a specific targeted measure here.
On the stress test aspects specifically in my subamendment to CPC-13, I think it's important to explain what the existing reporting data are doing.
Appendix B mentions data, assumptions and methodology. What the report says is:
This section describes the data, assumptions, and methodology that underlie the financial projections in the Results sections of this report.
Future cash flows for the base and additional Plans are projected over a long period of time, i.e. over more than 75 years, and depend on assumptions such as those regarding fertility, mortality, migration, labour force participation, job creation, unemployment, inflation, employment earnings, and investment returns. These assumptions form the basis for the projections of future income and expenditures of both components of the CPP.
To return to our subamendment, we're looking at some very similar core information, such as immigration levels, investment returns, productivity, wage growth, life expectancy and the existence of a prolonged economic downturn. The thing is, we're not making assumptions. We're actually saying the opposite. We need to have a range built in. There's a bit of that, but not to the degree we're pushing for.
The chief actuary even makes this concession in the report:
Although the demographic, economic, and investment assumptions represent the Chief Actuary's best estimates, the resulting future financial states of the base and additional CPP presented in this report should be interpreted with caution. This information is not intended to be predictions, but rather projections of the future financial states of the base and additional CPP.
We all understand, and I would believe even my Liberal colleagues would concede—I certainly hope they would—that the future revenues and expenditures of the CPP depend on a range of economic factors. We need to look at what the Canadian economy is going through and what the global economy is going through.
We understand that one change to one policy at the federal level can have long-ranging implications for other things. Antidevelopment laws from the Liberals affect investment in our energy sector in the long term, down the road. The proliferation and expansion of the temporary foreign worker program over the last 10 years affects youth unemployment, driving it up to nearly 15%.
They're just a couple of the myriad examples of how it isn't even just things that we are passengers on, as a country. Policy decisions made by this government will have effects. When we look at a report that goes out 75 years, as Mr. Countryman said, that's 75 years. That is many governments. That is many policy decisions along the way. Each one is pulling and pushing levers, irrespective of the externalities of it, that are going to have significant implications for this.
I don't see in the report an accounting for the range of options that could really establish the crux of what we're trying to do in our subamendment here. Even the actuarial report.... It's appendix B for those wanting to follow along. I don't have the French version, but it is published, as it should be, in both official languages. People can find that published on the government website, if they so desire.
It says:
Furthermore, the projected continued aging of the population in the future, albeit at a slower pace than observed in the past, combined with the continued retirement of the baby boom generation will certainly create significant social and economic changes. It is possible that the evolution of the working-age population, especially the active population, will be quite different from what has been historically observed and what has been assumed for the purpose of this report.
The chief actuary is doing their best with the information available. Even there, though, what the report is telling us is that we've had to make an assumption. We don't know.
We don't know what's going to happen. Why do we not have a report that accounts for all of these different possibilities, a report that allows for the best-case scenarios and the worst-case scenarios?
Interestingly enough, this is something, just on a smaller scale, that has been heaped on Canadians who are trying to buy a house. You can't even get approved for a mortgage unless you have been approved with a stress test, understanding that driving up interest rates in the future, which may or may not happen, is affecting your potential in the here and now to get a home.
If we're expecting young first-time homebuyers trying to get a foothold in life to deal with a stress test for a report that is affecting the retirement income of the entirety of the country, really, why are we not including that same level of scrutiny in accounting for the best-case scenarios and the worst-case scenarios?
There is an assumption being made that could be wrong. It could be. If the Liberals were the ones making these predictions, I think most of them would probably be wrong, but here we are now, and we have to account for the best-case scenarios and the worst-case scenarios.
I'm grateful that the office of the chief actuary is monitoring the current trends, the emerging trends. They adjust assumptions as needed, but they're still just assumptions. I think it would be better to have—ideally in plain language, but we'll take anything we can get in this report—the best-case scenarios and worst-case scenarios that account for all of these points of divergence that we can't really effectively predict even five years out, let alone 75 years out.
When you look at some of these assumptions here, the demographic assumptions, they look at the historical and projected populations of Canada, less Quebec. This is required—