The economic crisis of the 1930s urgently
brought the issue of poverty into the national political arena. As the
Depression deepened, provincial and local governments called on the
federal government to help fund relief programs for the unemployed. More
assistance was also given to war veterans in 1930 through the War
Veterans Allowance Act. The majority of Canadians readily accepted
the increased involvement of the federal government in social welfare
issues.
As the First World War had done, the outbreak of the Second World War
led many people to discuss the possibility of fundamental social change.
The memory of the Depression encouraged both the general population and
the government to advocate a national system of social security that would
protect all Canadians from extreme poverty. In this spirit, a Committee of
Reconstruction was established. A number of reports dealing with social
issues were written for this committee, one of which was the 1943
Report on Social Security for Canada by Dr. Leonard C. Marsh. In
it, Marsh called for a comprehensive national system of social security,
including insurance for sickness, old age, disability and maternity, along
with basic assistance for those who could not use the insurance
program.
The Marsh Report became very popular across Canada. However,
many parliamentarians objected to it, some because they feared the economy
might not continue to grow to support such a program, and others because
they continued to view poverty as largely a matter of personal and family
responsibility. Marsh's proposals were therefore not acted upon during the
war. Instead, two new national social programs were introduced:
Unemployment Insurance in 1940, to protect workers from temporary loss of
work, and Family Allowances in 1945, to supplement the incomes of families
with children. These programs were available to all Canadians since
neither one included a means test. New veterans' pensions were also
created.
The 1930s and 1940s also saw the emergence of new political parties and
interest groups that supported social reform. In the 1930s, the newly
formed Cooperative Commonwealth Federation (CCF) became an especially
outspoken advocate of fundamental social reform, but by the early 1940s
all the national political parties included social security issues in
their platforms. In addition, the dramatic increase in union membership
during the war resulted in much more powerful unions that lobbied for
better social welfare benefits for their members. New seniors' and
pensioners' groups added yet another level to this pressure for reform
from across the country.
After the war, in accordance with public pressure, various changes were
made to help the aged. In 1948, the year Prime Minister Louis St-Laurent
replaced William Lyon Mackenzie King, an income tax exemption was given to
everyone aged 65 and over. Furthermore, the amount of the tax deduction
workers were allowed to claim for contributions they made to private
pension plans was increased, thus encouraging them to contribute.
In 1950, a Joint Parliamentary Committee was appointed to look into old
age provisions in Canada and other countries and to make recommendations
to the government. The committee, which was composed of members of the
Senate and all parties in the House, recommended that there should be a
program of flat-rate benefits for everyone aged 70 and over, subject only
to residence requirements.
But the biggest change came in 1951 with the enactment of the national
and universal pension paid under the Old Age Security Act,
supplemented by the means-tested, cost-shared benefits made available
under the Old Age Assistance Act. These two acts replaced the
1927 Old Age Pensions Act and came into force on January 1,
1952.
Because a national, universal pension program was considered at that
time to be beyond the statutory powers of the federal government, a
Constitutional amendment was required before the Old Age Security
Act was introduced, adding section 94A to the British North
American Act's list of federal powers. This was only the second
Constitutional amendment adopted in Canada's history concerning division
of powers. Interestingly, the first Constitutional amendment was required
in 1940 to give the federal government the power to legislate Unemployment
Insurance, illustrating how important social welfare legislation was
considered to be at this time.
The required Constitutional amendment was struck, notwithstanding
several meetings and consultations between Ottawa and the provinces.
However, it was at the insistence of Quebec Premier Maurice Duplessis that
the provincial paramountcy sub-clause, which ensured that the Canada
Pension Plan (CPP) would not affect any provincial old age pension
program, was left in the wording. By May 1951, the federal government and
all ten provinces had agreed on the following wording:
"It is hereby declared that the Parliament of Canada may from time
to time make laws in relation to old age pensions in Canada, but no law
made by the Parliament of Canada in relation to old age pensions shall
affect the operation of any law present or future, of a provincial
legislature in relation to old age pensions."