As Canada's economy grew over the 1950s
and early 1960s, the question of the purpose of national pensions became
an important political issue. In 1951, the principle of universality was
considered to be the most important aspect of the new Old Age Security
program. The means test that had been part of the 1927 Old Age Pension
program was seen as humiliating, and in response, in 1951 Old Age Security
was made available to everyone at age 70. Despite this important change,
Old Age Security continued to be considered only a supplement to what
people saved for their retirement, since the maximum payments remained the
same as the maximum Old Age Pension payments. By the late 1950s, however,
the influential Beveridge Report of 1942 (which called for a comprehensive
system of social security that would ultimately end all poverty) remained
very popular. More and more people began to call for a new public pension
program that would no longer be merely supplemental, but that would
provide people with an income on which they could live.
In 1957, the monthly Old Age Security benefits increased twice, in July
and November. Benefits rose in July from $40 to $46 per month ($6
represented an increase of 15 per cent which, applied today, would
translate to an increase of approximately $53). The first increase, under
the Liberal government of Louis St-Laurent, was an attempt to win votes
during the June 1957 election campaign. This was characterized as a
political blunder. The mocking terms "six-buck boys" and "six-buck Harris"
(referring to W.E. Harris, Finance Minister from July 1, 1954 to June 21,
1957) were used by the Conservatives, who went on to win the election. The
newly elected Conservative government led by Prime Minister John
Diefenbaker further raised Old Age Security benefits, this time in
November, by $9 to $55 per month.
Because a number of politicians had argued, throughout the early 1950s,
that the American Social Security Act provided a good example for
Canada to follow, the government commissioned Dr. Robert M. Clark, an
economics professor at the University of British Columbia, to conduct a
study of the American system. The study suggested that such a system would
not in fact work in Canada because of demographic and economic differences
between the two countries. Nonetheless, Clark praised the United States'
inclusion of disability and survivor benefits, and this led Diefenbaker's
government to make these benefits a part of its reform proposals. In
addition, an income tax exemption was introduced for self-employed people
who put money aside for retirement in the form of contributions to a
Registered Retirement Savings Plan.
By the end of the Conservative government's term, all the other
political parties had developed proposals for a national, contributory
pension system. Thus in early 1963, when the Liberal party returned to
power under Prime Minister Lester B. Pearson, pensions had become such a
prominent issue that the new government introduced a plan for a
contributory program within a few months. For the next two years, the
issue was studied by a Senate committee led by Senator David Croll, and
was discussed between federal Minister of Health and Welfare Judy LaMarsh
and the provincial governments, among the various political parties, and
in public consultations. As these talks continued, Old Age Security,
Disability and Blind Persons' payments were increased in response to
pressure from the public and various Members of Parliament, in particular
Cooperative Commonwealth Federation MP Stanley Knowles.
A breakthrough in the talks came in April 1964. In March of that year,
Premier Jean Lesage of Quebec had announced that his government intended
to introduce a provincial contributory pension plan that was more
comprehensive than the federal plan, including disability and survivor
benefits, larger benefits for everyone involved, and more funding from the
provincial government. This was the first time a provincial government
sought to take on added responsibility in the field of social security,
and it therefore came as a surprise to the federal government as well as
the other provinces. Moreover, the more comprehensive nature of Lesage's
plan made it attractive. This move by Lesage is considered to be one of
the first initiatives of Quebec's Quiet Revolution.
After days of negotiation, it was agreed that Quebec would have a
Quebec Pension Plan that would be closely coordinated with the Canada
Pension Plan. This arrangement was possible because the 1951
Constitutional amendment gave the federal government the right to provide
old age pensions and, through the paramountcy clause, had preserved the
jurisdiction of the provinces in this area.
Once this was resolved, the provinces agreed to allow another
Constitutional amendment so that the Canada Pension Plan could extend
beyond the federal government's existing powers to legislate only old age
coverage. Now, the Plan could include people with disabilities and
survivors of Plan contributors regardless of age. Section 94A of the
British North American Act, which was added in 1951 to enable the
federal government to introduce Old Age Security, was amended to this
effect.
Another important aspect of the federal-provincial agreement on the
Canada Pension Plan was the defining of its amendment process. Two-thirds
of the "included" provinces must agree on changes to the Plan, and these
provinces must contain two-thirds of Canada's total population. An
opted-out province such as Quebec would be considered "included" for this
purpose so long as it had an agreement with the federal government to
cover workers in its territory who would otherwise be subject to the Plan
(such as bank and railway workers).
The Canada Pension Plan and Quebec Pension Plan finally came into
effect in 1966. A Guaranteed Income Supplement followed in 1967 to help
seniors and near-seniors who would not be able to benefit fully, if at
all, from the Canada Pension Plan or Quebec Pension Plan and who had
little or no income beyond Old Age Security.