In the years between Confederation and the
First World War, pensions were reserved for a select few. The majority of
Canadians continued working into old age, and when that was no longer
possible, they relied on personal resources or family and community for
support. Those seniors without work or support could avoid destitution by
turning to public poor relief or private charity, if available. However,
these forms of assistance were meagre and dispensed only after applicants
were subjected to demeaning eligibility tests intended to weed out the
"undeserving".
In the 19th century, the proportion of seniors in the total population
was not as large as it is now, and people did not live as long. At the
same time, poverty amongst seniors was not a very visible problem until
expanding industrialization brought a concentration of people to urban
centres, where living conditions could be harsh, economic survival
precarious, and traditional social support systems strained.
The idea of a state-sponsored system of pensions for seniors did not
come easily. Nineteenth century ideology stressed the importance of
individual self-reliance, even in old age. Poverty was believed to result
from character deficiency or lack of foresight and self-discipline, and
care for the poor and vulnerable members of society, including the aged,
was seen as a family and community responsibility. It was not thought to
be the role of government to interfere or to assume this obligation. Only
those with nowhere else to turn were to be recipients of limited state
help. The "poor relief" traditions that Canada had inherited from Britain
complemented this philosophy well, with their stress on local and
municipal responsibility for the poor and their attempts to discriminate
between "worthy" and "unworthy" supplicants.
The importance of the Roman
Catholic Church's role in poor relief in Quebec distinguished Quebec's
social welfare system from those of other provinces in this period and
well into the 20th century. This is because beginning in 1774,
when the British Parliament enacted the Quebec Act, the Catholic
Church's prominent role in many aspects of social policy-making in that
province, including education and relief for the poor, was protected.
Early Church doctrine viewed poverty not merely as an inevitable
component of a hierarchical society, but as a blessed condition which
enabled one to be nearer to God, for "a rich man shall hardly enter into
the kingdom of heaven" (Matthew 19: 23). At the same time the Gospels
pointed to the need for charity, which assumes a certain level of material
wealth. While the Church retained this core belief, in the centuries
that followed it placed increased emphasis on using one's material possessions
to benefit those less fortunate. Still later, in part as the various
Christian denominations re-examined and re-shaped their philosophies,
and in part in response to the appearance of socialist ideas, the betterment
of the human condition during life acquired even greater importance. It
came to be recognized that the State, through a coherent and sustained
programme, could play a legitimate role in meeting social needs for which
individual or institutional charity were insufficient.
Even if the federal government had wished to establish an old age
pension system, there were constitutional impediments. The British
North America Act of 1867 gave the provinces sole jurisdiction over
social welfare within their domains. There were also financial
considerations. Provincial and federal government revenues were limited.
The federal government had the greater resources, but they were not as
extensive as they would later become. Income tax, for instance, was not
introduced until the First World War. The priorities for the Dominion
government were economic development and the building of a viable
transcontinental nation.
However, by the early 20th century, industrialization and
urbanization had brought changes in work and family patterns. These
changes resulted in more and more seniors ending their lives in
poorhouses, or "old age homes" as they had come to be known.
Influenced by developments in other Western countries, where
industrialization and its social costs had been experienced earlier, and
convinced that the elderly poor should receive special consideration,
Canadian social reformers advocated replacing existing practices with a
national old age pension program. The Dominion government balked at the
suggestion, and in 1908 instituted a Government Annuities program instead,
for those who could afford it. Never widely popular, the Government
Annuities program stopped selling new annuities in 1975. Nevertheless,
payments from this virtually forgotten scheme continue to be paid by Human
Resources Development Canada, an example of the very long time frame
within which pension provisions must operate.
The creation of the Annuities program changed little. It would be
nearly twenty years before the first meaningful step was taken towards
replacing grudging charity for indigents with an acknowledgement of the
right of older citizens to a minimum level of support from society.