Thank you so much for being here, and to all of you actually.
I'm hoping that we end today and that by the time we finish dealing with this bill, all of us understand it better and we can clear up all of the misconceptions out there about so many things.
If you paid less, you get less. If you merge the CPP.... Someone who chooses to take the CPP at 60 years old, to get them to 65, has to expect that their.... They've been fortunate enough that those bridges were there.
I guess this is going to Mr. Mercier. I'm trying to think fast here. I think it would be interesting to see what happens at 65, how much of a difference there is. Are we talking about a $20 difference between the systems if somebody waits until 65, for their total benefit package? Some of them choose to apply for it at 60 and get a reduced benefit, but they've had the benefit of those extra dollars. So once they make the shift to 65, are they now getting $80,000 a year or are they getting $50,000 a year? I don't think there's that big a difference.