Thank you, Mr. Chair.
I'm not sure where they all are, but I have three colleagues with me from the Office of the Chief Actuary of the Public Sector Insurance and Pension Programs: Michel Rapin, Mario Mercier, and Lynne McKenna-Fleming, who is the acting DG, compensation and benefits.
Thank you, Mr. Chair, and thank you for the opportunity to discuss Bill C-201 with the committee.
My remarks will be directed to the Canadian Forces Superannuation Act, but apply equally to the RCMP plan.
First, I want to thank this committee for their good work on behalf of serving members and veterans.
Although I don't support this legislation, it has nothing to do with the profound respect and admiration that we all have for the Canadian Forces and RCMP. I'm proud of my own military service and the people I served with, and I'm very proud of the men and women in uniform today. They and their families do so much, and they have every right to expect that the Government of Canada will take care of them in return. That is what we are doing and what we continue to try to improve.
As the committee knows, the Canadian Forces Superannuation Plan was integrated with the Canada Pension Plan in 1966. The pensions were blended and not stacked, meaning that part of our pension contributions now went to pay for CPP benefits. This kept the overall contribution from increasing.
Just like payments into the plans, benefits of the two plans are also blended and not stacked, meaning that we get benefits from both plans. Total premiums and total benefits remained essentially the same, and we are getting 100% of what we have paid for. The CFSA compares favourably with other pension plans, and only about 30% of Canadians have such defined benefit pension plans.
There is no doubt that the integration of the pension plans was not well communicated. I have spoken with people who did get briefed, but most did not. I don't personally recall any briefings, although, as was pointed out, I was probably so preoccupied with going through pilot training at the time, as an 18-year-old, that I probably wouldn't have remembered anyway. I don't doubt that it was covered in the daily routine orders that were published every day. The situation is briefly referred to, and I think that was mentioned earlier, in the Digest of the Canadian Forces Retirement Benefits, which every member gets on leaving, and on page 19 it says:
Annuities under the CFSA are subject to a reduction when an annuitant reaches age 65....
It goes on to say more.
Ultimately, every member is responsible for knowing and understanding their pay and benefits. The system didn't make it as easy as it could have in 1966, for sure, but that is now history.
Let me just state how I personally relate to Bill C-201 and the issues that surround it. I joined the Royal Canadian Air Force in 1964 at age 17 and served 31 years, retiring in November 1994 at age 47. I started drawing my pension of 62% of the average of my best five years' salary. The amount remained the same until cost-of-living indexing kicked in at age 55 and after I had reached the 85 point in years of service plus age. Eight years of indexing were added to my pension in one lump, and that amounted to about a 10% increase, because obviously those were times of fairly low inflation. Annual indexing for the past seven years has brought very modest annual increases in these times of low inflation.
I've paid for 25% of my pension and the taxpayers have paid the other 75%.
Part of that pension is the lifetime benefit and part is the bridge benefit. The bridge benefit is generally about 30% of what the newly retired member receives as an initial pension, and it is intended to bridge the time between when the member retires from the service and when the member collects CPP, normally at age 65. At age 65, the bridge benefit disappears. It's got nothing to do with CPP per se. At age 65, the bridge benefit disappears and is replaced by CPP. This ensures a smooth flow of total pension income throughout retirement years.
One thing this government did was change the formula for calculating CFSA benefits to increase the lifetime portion. This is to the advantage of every pensioner and should mitigate to some degree the concerns that gave rise to Bill C-201.
This is an emotional issue and I understand that. I take no pleasure in opposing a position strongly held by people I care about, but I have to be honest with them. Even though I would stand to benefit from this bill, it would have been inappropriate for me to support it given all the facts.
I believe that several points are relevant. The CF and the RCMP are not unions, were not unions in 1966 and are not unions today, and we don't get to negotiate pay and benefits. On the CF side, that makes us just about like every other military in the world today. It is wrong to suggest that we are picking on the CF and the RCMP.
The public service superannuation, other federal pension plans, provincial plans, most teachers' plans, and many others are set up exactly the same way. We are getting exactly what we paid for, and the CFSA is based on two simple things: how long you served and what were your best five years.
Before age 65, military and RCMP pension plans deliver 2% per year of service, based on the average salary for the best five years. In the case of the CF and the RCMP, it is common to retire in our forties or early fifties. We collect our pensions immediately, where others do not. CPP was set up on the assumption that Canadians would generally work until age 65. People can choose to work or not--most can after retirement from the CF or RCMP--but everyone should do a bit of homework to figure out what's coming down the road. People don't plan to fail; they fail to plan.
When someone retires before age 65 and works at something until 65, their contributions to CPP will generally ensure that the CPP they collect will at least offset the bridge benefit that disappears at age 65. That's the way the bridge benefit was calculated in the first place. If someone does not contribute to CPP after retirement from the CF until 65, they will probably get less, for sure, because they haven't contributed to it. In my case, my CPP will exceed my bridge benefit by about $300 a month. We get what we paid for.
Many people take CPP as early as age 60 and take the 0.5% reduction per month before 65. So it's a 30% reduction if they take it the full 60 months early. If they take CPP at age 60, what the CF and RCMP members are doing for that five years is double-dipping their CPP and the bridge benefit, and that's a good thing.
The bridge benefit will still disappear at age 65, and contrary to what was said, it has nothing to do with CPP. It's apples and oranges. It's the bridge benefit that disappears at age 65, regardless of when you take CPP. There's no relation at all. So if you have taken CPP early, you are taking a reduced CPP. When your bridge benefit disappears at age 65, which it will do under the Canadian Forces Superannuation Act, then yes, you will probably wind up getting less.
If you do the math, in most cases you are still better off taking the CPP early, but there's a crossover point, depending on your personal circumstances, that somewhere down the road the benefit of double-dipping is going to disappear. Figure out what that age is, and if you think you're going to live longer than that, maybe don't take it early. But who knows?
Taking CPP early is a personal choice, but I emphasize that CPP is here and CFSA is there. The only relationship is that, at age 65, the bridge benefit part of CFSA disappears. It has nothing to do with what your CPP is.
Those in favour of Bill C-201 sometimes put forward arguments about how much members have suffered and sacrificed during their careers. I can personally identify with those arguments, but they are emotional and should not devalue the worth of a properly constituted and financed plan that operates exactly as it is supposed to. In my military career, I've moved about 20 times. My wife was a registered nurse. She managed to work wherever we were. I served out of choice. She served out of choice in following me, so far, for 41 years, possibly out of curiosity, but we chose to serve. I can tell you, it was the best job I will ever have in my life. As much as I enjoy this one, nothing will ever top my military career in terms of my personal satisfaction and enjoyment.
I get a lot of letters and most of them are unfriendly. What I'm typically getting is people sending me their CFSA pay slips with the notice that their CFSA pension will decrease by some amount at age 65, as per the plan, and they're mad as heck. What they're not sending me is their CPP statement, showing how much their CPP will be. They're also upset that they will lose indexing on the amount of the bridge benefit deducted, but what they are not understanding is that they will pick up indexing on the CPP amount. It really does add up. We didn't pay for a stacked pension and we're getting exactly what we paid for. That makes us the same as other pension plans.
People bring up the money that was transferred from our pension plans to general revenue in the 1990s. That total amount was actually $32 billion from the RCMPSA, PSSA, and the CFSA, with the CF share being about $15 billion. As egregious as that may have been, it was carried out by the government of the day and is now history. There is simply not an extra $15 billion or $32 billion out there to put it back. The bottom line on our pensions is that, whatever happens to the actual investments to support it, our pensions are guaranteed by the Government of Canada.
Another red herring that is totally apples and oranges and is regularly used, and was used several times today, is that people have been led to believe that somehow MPs and others have exempted themselves from a clawback. In the first place, we have zero input into our compensation package. Second, MPs come and go at any age and do not collect a pension until age 55. Third, there is no clawback at 65 because we didn't get a bridge benefit from or to any age and there's simply nothing to claw back. It's a complete red herring, and it is there simply to stir up outrage at people who are easy targets. Being an easy target is part of this job, but this is disingenuous at the very least.
Folks also point to a petition that was signed by over 100,000 people. I said it in the House and I'll say it again: if somebody gives you a petition and says if you sign here you might get extra money, you're probably not going to question it. And that doesn't make someone dishonest or dumb; it just makes them human. I've talked to many who signed the petition without question or who knew that it wouldn't or couldn't amount to anything. There are also many generals who are rightly known as “people people” who have not signed the petition and who understand the reality of the situation.
Mr. Chair, the false premise upon which Bill C-201 is based is not the only argument against the proposed legislation. There is also a prohibitive cost attached. There would be a one-time past service liability cost of $7 billion, and those numbers come from the Office of the Superintendent of Financial Institutions. We can delve into more of that if we wish.
In addition, plan members and Canadian taxpayers would have to bear the burden of increased and future contributions. This could add up to significantly increased pay deductions. Would it be fair to ask taxpayers to pay the increased burden when most of them do not have company plans of their own?
The government does have a responsibility to our service members, and we also have a responsibility to the Canadian taxpayer to exercise careful stewardship of the money they entrust to us. There are some legitimate issues, and we digressed—as always happens in these things—to discuss some of those in the first hour. There are legitimate issues out there that should be addressed and should be discussed, but none of those are discussed under Bill C-201. So Bill C-201, in my view, is not a starter for the reasons I have mentioned, as regrettable as that is. I'd love to be able to collect something I haven't paid for. I'd love for all of us to be able to do that. But it just doesn't work that way.
Mr. Chair, thank you, and thank you to members of the committee. We'd be pleased to answer your questions.