Mr. Speaker, at a time when Canadians are brimming with energy, excitement and ideas, this Liberal government as tired, apathetic and unimaginative. It continues to repeat the mistakes of the past.
The citizens of the city of Calgary, I am proud to say, exemplify this new energy, excitement and ideas. This is a city which returned a Reform member to every riding in the last federal election. Its influence, and Alberta's influence, on national affairs through creative policy alternatives and new ideas that flow from the area, is considerable. I salute the citizens of Calgary and Alberta. I am proud to be a representative of that city and that province.
Today we begin debate on Bill C-2, which is a very poor attempt by the government to remedy serious flaws in the design and management of a major part of Canada's social security system. Bill C-2 is a good illustration of the government's tired thinking, lack of imagination and unwillingness to look at new and better options.
My colleague, the leader of the opposition, pointed out this morning in the debate the ways in which the government is eroding the retirement security of seniors. Bill C-2 also illustrates the government's failure to consult with young Canadians and to look after their interests. Millions of young contributors will be financially brutalized—and that is not too strong a term—if this legislation passes in its present form.
At the end of this debate I trust that Canadians will see and understand that Bill C-2 is poor legislation and that it should not be passed. Canadians will see that there are alternate ways and better ways to save, to invest and to secure their retirement incomes and their futures.
Canadians dislike unfairness. We dislike seeing the young, the disadvantaged or the infirm exploited. Canadians dislike paying for inefficient government. They dislike seeing funds poorly invested or hard earned dollars frittered away on foolish, made in Ottawa schemes. Canadians dislike intrusive government meddling in their personal affairs. They dislike being told by government how to manage their paycheques. They particularly dislike being told by distant government what is best for them and how their earnings should be spent.
I would ask the House to consider these Canadian characteristics and then reflect on the legislation before us today. Members will see that the legislation is grossly unfair to younger contributors, continues to perpetuate poor management and investment practices, and is out of touch with the needs, desires and aspirations of Canadians.
The legislation, if enacted, would result in a massive plunder of the earnings of younger Canadians. Younger contributors to the plan will receive less back in retirement benefits than the value of their contributions. Not only will they have to pay for their benefits, they will also have to pay for the massive debt accumulated through the errors of previous Liberal administrations.
The fact that younger Canadians will be asked to pay many times more for their CPP retirement benefits than their parents or grandparents is no longer news. The dimensions of this rip-off, however, are not well known. The cynicism of the government in papering over the cracks in this plan has not yet been exposed.
My job and that of my colleagues during this debate is to expose the magnitude of the plunder and to unmask the Liberal cynicism which underlies this bill.
The chief actuary of the fund tells us that the CPP paid a real return after inflation of 22.5 percent for those retiring in 1979. But that falls by more than one-half to 10.1 percent for those who retired in 1994 and it falls again by more than one-half to 4.9 percent for those retiring in 2013, and falls yet again to 1.9 percent for those retiring in 2053 and to 1.8 percent for those yet unborn.
For those retiring in 2033, which are many people who have just entered the plan, their return will be, according to the chief actuary of the fund, only 2.5 percent. These people will receive only a 2.5 percent return for investing nearly 10 percent of their earnings in a pension plan. All this with contributions soaring.
Although I realize that so many numbers are difficult to follow they must be in the parliamentary record in fairness to future generations. It is no wonder that young Canadians are becoming outraged by these proposed contribution rates. The CPP is a shabby, unfair and unjust scheme for the young and those yet unborn.
Talk about unfairness and political cynicism. What political party would design a pension plan that passes the massive debt it ran up on to Canadians too young to vote or even yet unborn? I merely have to look across the Chamber to see such a calculating, cynical political party.
The next time members opposite speak to their children or grandchildren, or their neighbour's children, tell them what is being done to their future, how they are being shackled for the rest of their working lives with the cost of this and previous Liberal government mistakes, mistakes that the previous Liberal speaker in this debate even admitted were well known in the 1960s.
The CPP is a pay as you go pension scheme, and was not even properly funded to begin with. It provided the attraction of low contributions to those first in and a high rate of return exceeding what could be expected in any normally funded investment plan. That is how the Liberals got Canadians to buy into it in the 1960s.
If you understand pyramid schemes or the chain letter concept, then you will understand the concept of the CPP design. Some writers refer to Canada's pay as you go CPP as a Ponzi type scheme. For those who do not remember, Charles Ponzi was a small time but well known swindler. He promised a 50 percent profit on money in 45 days, double that in six months. Investors flocked to him. To maintain the promised rate of return he passed the funds of new investors along as dividends to earlier ones. But when inevitably the number of new investors declined, the whole scheme fell apart and Ponzi ended up in jail.
Although the architects of the CPP did not end up in jail, the poor design of the plan is glaringly obvious. The government should admit this as a first step in removing the blinders and considering new and better alternatives to this defective plan.
In addition, there are enormous implications for the proposed Canada pension plan investment board and it needs to be thoroughly thought through. I do not believe the government has even begun to do that.
The bill proposes to establish an investment board to manage the funds transferred to it from the Canada pension plan account. Eventually, this board will control enormous amounts of money, particularly in a country with such a small capital pool. Estimates suggest this fund will be over $200 billion in just 15 years.
The investment board will be managed by 12 directors, including a chairman and each director will be appointed by, guess who, the cabinet on the recommendation of the minister. The board, therefore, and the fund will be susceptible to political manipulation. After all, this huge pool of capital would be a great temptation to any government. If anyone does not believe me, just look at the jobs transitions fund that is being misused with and the questions which arose in question period about that. That fund is not even close to $200 billion, but politicians cannot keep their hands off even small funds.
As members will know, the CPP is a pay as you go scheme. The result is that millions of Canadians have been promised a pension but no fund of money is sitting there to pay them those pensions. We have a lurking disaster, a staggering debt of over $500 billion, almost as much as the entire federal debt again, arising from the mistakes in the design and management of the CPP must be borne by all Canadians.
While there may be many different proposals to achieve this, one thing is clear. This debt should not and must not be put on the backs solely of the young and the unborn.
The Reform Party believes that new thinking is required to save the CPP. Our proposal calls for moving from the present pay as you go public system, to a fully funded system based on individual accounts while protecting the benefits of current seniors. This means that individuals will own all the assets in their account and their retirement benefits will be substantially greater. When they die their children and their spouse will inherit the capital. This would go a long way toward eliminating poverty for elderly widows, for example.
If young Canadians knew that each dollar they put into a retirement plan would go into their own personal account and that they would receive it back, including a fair market return on the investment, they would gladly accept the plan and even leave some portion of their premiums to pay the present beneficiaries.
If the government had the fortitude to ask young Canadians, certainly those in their 20s, 30s and 40s about their preferences, it would find an overwhelming number who would like to own their own retirement assets and not rely solely on the promises of a debt-laden government with a sorry track record.
This government, like previous Liberal regimes before it, arrogantly believes it knows what is best for people and continues to introduce legislation that is not in the best interest of future generations and that is intrusive and inflexible.
If this legislation goes ahead as it is written, the CPP is headed for certain disaster because the young will not support it and they will eventually defeat it.
Reform speakers will raise many other considerations that must be debated before we vote on this bill. Countries around the world are following the example of Chile in moving from publicly to privately owned and managed pensions. These include Australia, Argentina, Bolivia, Columbia, Mexico, New Zealand, Peru, Singapore and Uruguay. Great Britain has already partially privatized its public pension system and is considering a more ambitious reform.
I want to say again to Canadians watching this debate, and I hope that thousands of Canadians are watching it, that the issue before the House today and in the days ahead is tremendously important to the interests of all citizens of this country. The future of the CPP is a question that every working Canadian and every retired Canadian needs to carefully consider because working Canadians will soon have an extra $700-plus every year taken from their income to keep this current scheme afloat and retired Canadians will also be watching carefully to make sure that their pension security is there.
However, the impact of the changes to the CPP go beyond the financial consequences now or even the security of our retirement. I believe this debate will be a turning point in our children's attitudes toward our generation. Their attitudes could have—