I don't know enough about the procedures here, but any changes to the regulations around CPP wouldn't affect the consolidated revenue fund. They would only affect the CPP fund. When you say only the minister can talk about revenue spending, I don't know if that distinction is important or not, but perhaps it is.
When I look at the legislation, my question is what we can do with the legislation to provide incentives to address the take-up question. That means that you build in penalties.
Right now, actually, if the government were a business, you would make money by not paying benefits. Particularly, you make money by not paying benefits when you don't pay interest on retroactive benefits. In fact, when somebody shows up at age 90 to claim their CPP, you've given their money away to somebody else, especially when you don't.... You pay 11 months, and even when you acknowledge that you've made an administrative error, you don't pay interest, so you make money.
If it was a business, you'd say, well, we don't want those types of incentives; we would actually have an incentive that would say we had better make sure everybody is signed up or we're going to pay down the road. The part of the legislation that would exempt the state from pursuing retroactive benefits reduces the burden. It actually makes it easier to have a take-up problem. So I would say no.
On the provision with interest, I said I'd rather have the Financial Administration Act, not because I want to be pursuing interest when there's an overpayment, but because I want to have an incentive in place to address the take-up problem. As long as they're not paying interest when they make retroactive benefits, you're actually putting in place an incentive to not address the take-up problem. If you really wanted to take that to heart, you'd say that when there has been a retroactive benefit, you will pay this plus you will pay a penalty--if you really wanted to create an incentive for the system to sign people up.