Canada's public pensions have a long and
colourful history that has intersected with many of the fundamental issues
at the core of the country's development.
The Canadian pension system began in the shadow of the poor-relief
systems of the Old World. This pattern continued in the decades following
Confederation as Canada remained a largely pre-industrial society in which
poverty, old age and disability were considered primarily the
responsibility of individual families.
With the onset of industrialization in the early 20th
century, and the vast movements of people from farms into cities, the
resulting break-down of traditional large families and the experience of
the First World War stimulated wide-spread interest in the creation of the
first national public pension program in 1927. The Great Depression of
1929 demonstrated the fragility of industrial economies across the Western
world and further galvanized support for the enlargement of Canada's
social security network. This idea gained support upon the recovery of the
economy with the outbreak of the Second World War.
The prosperity of the post-war years enabled governments to increase
social spending dramatically. In keeping with the international growth of
public pensions, and with the added pressures of newly created federal and
provincial political parties and lobby groups, a far-reaching,
multi-layered national pension system was gradually created in the second
half of the 20th century. This contributed greatly to the
decline in poverty levels among seniors, and today constitutes over 25 per
cent of federal spending in Canada ($42 billion in 2000).
Serious questions concerning the sustainability of Canada's public
pensions were not voiced until the mid-1980s, but grew louder as the
Canadian economy entered the worst economic recession since the Great
Depression in 1929. By the end of the 1990s, the economy revived and
performed among the world's best. The return to prosperity and concurrent
adjustments to public pension programs essentially restored the pension
system's financial well-being and provided evidence that it would be
available for future generations.
However, are economic prosperity and sound financial management enough
to ensure the survival of Canadian public pensions? Rapid technological
advancements, shifts in the labour market, globalization and international
pressures, and the continued ageing of the population will likely all
contribute to the changing composition of Canada's workforce, Canada's
level of prosperity, and Canadian society as a whole.
In addition, the pressures that have both propelled and limited
developments in pension policy throughout Canada's past must not merely be
consigned to history. The relationship between the federal and provincial
governments, new national political parties, regional developments,
demographics, immigration patterns and continued social change could all
return in new ways to affect the pension debate. Even the threat of global
phenomena such as economic uncertainty, environmental change, and war
cannot be ruled out.
The degree to which these challenges will affect Canada's public
pension system remain to be seen. However, the past 150 years have
demonstrated that regardless of the nature of the forces affecting
Canadian social policy making, the interest and activism of Canadians have
been crucial to the success of our public pensions. This key element will
continue to be a guiding force as future Canadian societies come to terms
with, and respond to, whatever developments await them.
It is interesting to note that the median life expectancy in 2050 in
Canada is expected to be 85.26 years, according to a recent study by
Shripad Tuljapurkar, Ph.D. The study, supported by the U.S. National
Institute on Aging, "...suggests that mortality rates in G-7 countries
will continue their historical decline, as science continues to alter the
face of medicine and public health." (National Institutes of Health news
release, Life Expectancy in G-7 Industrialized Nations May Exceed Past
Predictions, Study Suggests (Bethesda, MD, June 14, 2000).) Dr.
Tuljapurkar's report also found that, "...mortality at all ages in every
country has declined at a steady, exponential rate for the past 50 years."
(Ibid)