Saturday, November 26, 2011

And to think: You asked why we cared about income trusts?


Image: Canadians Occupy Parliament over Flaherty's lie about "tax leakage" from income trusts

Canadians' vanishing retirement incomes

BY PAUL WILLCOCKS,
TIMES COLONIST
NOVEMBER 26, 2011 3:07 AM

Canadians have lost a lot over the years. A generation ago, most people could count on buying a home for the equivalent of about three year's salary. That dream is gone.

And a generation ago, most people could count on retiring with a guaranteed pension from their company. They knew how much they would get, and, with Canada Pension Plan and old age security, they could count on a comfortable retirement.

It's extraordinary how that has been taken away, with no real debate.

Companies decided defined benefit plans - ones that paid a guaranteed retirement income - were too costly.

Employee and company paid into defined benefit plans. If the reserves looked like they might not provide the promised benefits in future, they had to be topped up.

So companies pushed to eliminate the plans, or change them to defined contribution plans. Employees and company would contribute and the funds invested. The pension would be based on however much money was in the fund on retirement. There was no obligation to provide an income. (Government workers, including MPs and MLAs, still have defined benefit plans. Politicians believe you should pay for guaranteed pensions for them, but not that you should have one.)

And work changed, from long-term employment with big companies to much less certain work, often parttime or on contract, and without any pension.

Only one in four British Columbians has a workplace pension today.

This huge change in the social contract hasn't been discussed. And while workplace pensions have been slashed, there has been no corresponding increase in public retirement benefits. Those benefits are low compared to other OECD countries, in large part because Canadians could once count on workplace plans.

The Harper government has offered a token response to the pension problems with legislation allowing new pooled pension plans.

It's a lame response to a real problem. The new plans would give small business the opportunity to provide a pension plan by signing a deal with a bank or investment company.

The employees would have the voluntary chance to contribute, and the employer could also contribute if he chose (not that likely, I'd say). The investment firm would take its cut for managing the money and the savings would be available at retirement.

Some employers will offer the plan. Some people will sign on. But not many. And there is no benefit over RRSPs; people who have not contributed to their own retirement fund, for whatever reason, are unlikely to opt into a voluntary pooled plan.

The government could have easily made the plan at least slightly better. It could have allowed the pooled plans, and had the funds managed by the Canadian Pension Plan investment experts. That's similar to the approach taken in Saskatchewan, where such a plan already exists. That's also the model promised by the B.C. government in 2008, and never delivered.

That would have provided excellent money management at the lowest cost. Instead, the Harper government offered the banks and the investment houses the chance to manage the money and collect the fees.

That's strange, because earlier this year Finance Minister Jim Flaherty called for an investigation into the high fees charged by providers of Canadian mutual funds and other investments. A study found Canadians pay more than twice as much in management fees as Americans. Those costs significantly reduce the money being available for retirement. Now Flaherty is opening a new market for them.

This isn't just an issue for those nearing retirement age.

The giant baby boom bulge is now nearing 65. In 1971, there were 6.2 British Columbians of working age for every person over 65. By 2034, there will be just 2.4 working-age people for each person over 65.

If boomers push for better pensions, the cost will fall heavily on those still working.

Footnote: The best option would be an increase in CPP benefits, now capped at about $935 a month. That would require increased contributions by employees and employers.

pwillcocks@timescolonist.com
© Copyright (c) The Victoria Times Colonist

4 comments:

Dr Mike said...

Got to love a guy who tells us to eat cat food , "it sure is yummy" , while he eats steak.

Take a bow Jim Flaherty

He tells the majority of us without any private pension plans to pay insurance companies & banks an exorbitant fee to manage meagre savings while he sits atop a defined pension plan funded by "us" , the above cat food eaters.

I would love to tell Jim Flaherty where to shove his beloved steak.

Dr Mike Popovich

Bruce Benson said...

I sure did not need to read Paul Willcocks article regarding vanishing retirement incomes. I am experiencing it in real time thanks to the likes of corrupt Harper and his little leprechaun Jimmy Flaherty. I know all about the deceit and lies. It's sad that Canadians don't give a damn and they like the the scum that has lied their way into power and will do and say anything to keep it.

Anonymous said...

Little Jim has us all figured out.
While he enjoys his government pensions
padded post government jobs to come, he has gifted us with the PRPP's managed by
Manulife .

Hey Jim your a failure and take your infested PRPPee's with you !!

MC

Anonymous said...

You should all get educated as to why people like these get elected constantly:

http://bit.ly/dYaWUc