Committee members, my name is Jean-Pierre Laporte. I am a pension lawyer with the firm of Osler, Hoskin & Harcourt LLP, in their Toronto office.
I've been practising in the field of pension law since 2001. I was a member of the executive of the pension and benefits law section of the Ontario Bar Association. In that capacity I've assisted in the preparation of submissions to the Expert Commission on Pensions of Ontario. I've also written about pension plan issues. For example, I published an article with Mr. Sheldon Wayne on esoteric products such as individual pension plans, and also on plan administration issues.
My first contribution to the development of pension reform came in 2004, when I proposed for the first time the creation of a supplemental Canada Pension Plan solution to enhance coverage in Canada. I made this proposal in an article published in Benefits and Pensions Monitor, a trade publication.
Your standing committee has been tasked with the general topic of women and pensions. I have reviewed some of the evidence given by other witnesses to this committee and I do not think it is useful to go over the statistics that officials from various governmental agencies have already supplied to this committee. Rather, in the limited time that I have, I would like to share the concept of my supplemental Canada Pension Plan solution and why I think it is tailored to assist Canadian women in saving for their retirement.
We know that a very large portion of people working in the private sector do not participate in pension plans. At best, their employer might provide access to a group RRSP, a retirement savings plan. Group RRSPs never provide the certainty of a set pension amount in retirement. Also, very often the contributions made by employers under a group RRSP are too low to generate a sufficient pool of assets to ensure a comfortable retirement. Moreover, in a group RRSP, it is the employee who has the ultimate responsibility for managing the retirement contributions and investing them in the market. Finally, the financial products available under group RRSPs are often more costly on a unit cost basis than under a pension plan. This is because pension plans, especially large ones, can take advantage of economies of scale and do not have a lot of marketing costs.
What is the result? Women who work for employers who don't offer any kind of retirement plan are the worst off. The same applies to all the stay-at-home moms who are working but just not getting any T4 income. If they're lucky enough to be in a group RRSP--and I'm talking about those who are not in the home--they pay higher fees. They have to be financially sophisticated to manage their money or else ask for advice, pay for that as well, and hope that by the time they retire the stock market hasn't collapsed.
While I'm oversimplifying a lot, generally this is the lay of the land.
The supplemental Canada Pension Plan solution is designed to overcome all these issues and to ensure that pensions are provided to all Canadians, regardless of whether they work at home, in a small corner store, as professionals, as consultants, or even in a large company. The basic tenets are as follows.
First, why not allow Canadians to contribute in excess of the modest limits currently found in the CPP--this year it is $2,118.60 for an employee--all the way up to the limit found in the Income Tax Act for defined contribution plans? That limit this year is $22,000.
Second, let's use the existing CPP and EI payroll system that every employer has to abide by to collect these additional voluntary contributions from the employees and the employers and have them administered by an impartial arm's-length-from-government body such as the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board. The facilities and expertise are already in place. There would be no need to create a new bureaucracy.
Third, the CPPIB, or a sister board or sister agency, could then turn to the private sector and seek, through open and transparent bidding processes, the best investment management expertise that money can buy. The only difference would be that because of the huge scale of this plan, the unit costs that the financial institutions would charge would be a fraction of what an individual has to pay at the retail level.
Number four, we could also allow people who are not currently employed by anyone to contribute some more modest amount of money to the supplemental plan. There is no reason in my mind why someone who is at home looking after children should not be allowed to save for their retirement.
Number five, employers would have the option of making 100% of the contributions, or no contribution whatsoever--I'm thinking here of a very, very small employer that just doesn't have any money for anything else but paying minimum wage--or anything in between. This means that for small businesses that have trouble making ends meet and that are paying minimum wage, the supplemental CPP would not be an extra payroll tax. However, bonuses could be paid into the plan if the business has a good year; and employers, even if they don't contribute or if they opt not to contribute, would still be obligated to remit the employee portions if the employee decides to put money into the supplemental plan.
So let me talk briefly about supplemental CPP and women. This brings me to the final point. How would this reform help women?
For one thing, allowing a woman to participate in a pension plan even when she is not actively in the workforce is an important first step in building up adequate retirement savings. Moreover, having the professional staff of a world-class pension plan like the CPP invest the moneys instead of having someone who is busy juggling work life and home life is another definite plus, in my mind. Having the reform be purely voluntary also helps, because there would be no job-killing payroll tax for businesses that just can't afford to participate, but there would still be the opportunity for those who want to save to participate--the employees. We know that many women, unfortunately, have been relegated to less-well-paying jobs that fit within that category, so this reform would help them in a very significant way.
The tremendous economies of scale translate into huge savings for Canadians. Some preliminary calculations I have made suggest that each and every year, assuming a modest participation rate, Canadians would be able to put away another $10 billion into their own savings accounts instead of paying those in fees. And this is every year. The beauty of this is that it will not cost the taxpayer anything, because contributions to pension plans are tax deferrals; they're not tax expenditures. This means that while in the year the contribution is made there is less tax collected, as you know, when you get your RRSP refund in April, the money that has been contributed with interest becomes taxable when it is withdrawn from the fund. So it becomes really an accounting exercise. This is very different from the spending on social programs where, once the money is spent, it's gone for good.
So by pre-funding people's retirements, we are taking pressure off the generations of tomorrow, the taxpayers of tomorrow, our children and grandchildren. This means that we allow for more money or tax dollars for other worthy programs, such as child care spaces, better schools, and the list goes on.
I'll conclude my remarks here. Thank you so much.