Sustainability of the Canada Pension Plan
and the Old Age Security program was the major issue in the 1990s. In
this, the last decade of the twentieth century, fewer Canadian seniors
were being counted among the poor, in large part because of Canada's
public pension programs. At the same time, however, seniors were making up
an increasing proportion of the total population as life expectancy
continued to rise and health standards improved. A longer and healthier
life for Canadians was a cause for celebration, but it also meant that
retirement years were lengthening and would continue to do so in the
future. The longer people lived, the longer they would require an
income.
Canada's net federal debt had risen virtually uninterrupted since the
mid-1970s. It climbed from $34 billion in 1975, representing approximately
a 20 per cent debt-to-Gross Domestic Product ratio, to a total of $583
billion in 1996-1997, representing roughly a 70 per cent debt-to-Gross
Domestic Product ratio. That high debt left Canada's fiscal health
extremely vulnerable to economic shocks such as increased interest rates
or an economic slowdown.
However, by the mid-1990s deep spending cuts and a thriving economy
stopped the growth of the yearly deficit. For the first time since
1969-1970, a budgetary surplus of $3.5 billion was recorded in the fiscal
year 1997-1998.
Of concern, too, was the ageing of the large baby boom generation. That
group would place enormous strain on a public pension system already
suffering from declining numbers of working taxpayers and contributors
relative to the size of the population that was becoming eligible for
benefits. In 1966 when the Canada Pension Plan was created, there were
seven workers for every retired person in Canada. In 2000 that ratio was
5:1- it is projected to be 3:1 in 2040.
In the 1990s, the country's pension system remained sound, but after
extensive public consultations, the federal and provincial governments
undertook a number of reforms to ensure that it would be able to meet the
increased demands placed on it over the coming years. The most important
changes involved funding arrangements for the Canada Pension Plan, and
changing the way some benefits were calculated.
In 1998, a new course was set that would increase Canada Pension Plan
contribution rates more rapidly than planned and implement various benefit
adjustments meant to restrain future growth in benefit costs. At the same
time, a Canada Pension Plan Investment Board was established to diversify
the investment of Canada Pension Plan funds and maximize the amount of
money that would be available to pay future benefits.
A major reform proposed for the Old Age Security program in 1996 would
have replaced the existing Old Age Security/Guaranteed Income Supplement
program with a single payment that would target the most needy and reduce
payment amounts to some higher-income pensioners. The Seniors Benefit, as
this new payment was to be called, faced opposition. In any case, by 1998
improved fiscal conditions made this cost-motivated measure appear less
urgent. It was never implemented; however, other more modest initiatives
were carried out.
In 1996, a withholding tax was imposed on Old Age Security and Canada
Pension Plan benefits paid to seniors living abroad. For the first time,
too, the clawback on Old Age Security benefits for high-income earners was
extended to those living outside Canada. Another important change to the
pension programs involved a modernization initiative. In the year 2000,
equality of treatment in laws, including those pertaining to pensions, was
extended to same-sex couples. Members of same-sex couples would be
included in the definition of common-law partners and would have the same
obligations and rights to benefits under the Canada Pension Plan and Old
Age Security programs.
Minor changes were also made to the Old Age Security Act to
provide for a new method of determining the entitlement to and the amount
of Guaranteed Income Supplement and Allowance benefits payable to persons
who had not lived in Canada for at least 10 years after reaching age
18.
The government was confident that the reforms undertaken in the 1990s
would ensure the long-term sustainability of the public pension programs
and that benefits would be available for future retirees. Nevertheless, it
stressed the on-going importance of private provisions for retirement
income such as savings, investments, and Registered Retirement Savings
Plans. This was especially important in light of workforce downsizing that
had taken place in that decade, and the increased number of contract,
part-time, and self-employed workers who were not always provided with
employer-sponsored pension benefits. At the same time, these changes in
employment patterns made saving for retirement more difficult for many
Canadians and accentuated the importance of the Canada Pension Plan and
Old Age Security.