Search

Search results

  1. Federal government’s spending rationale based on misleading debt picture

    Canada has the fifth-highest level of total indebtedness (relative to the size of our economy) among 29 industrialized countries. ...

  2. Caution Required When Comparing Canada’s Debt to that of Other Countries

    The federal government continues to rationalize its debt-financed spending based on international comparisons showing Canada with the lowest level of debt in the G7. Of the two broad measures of debt, gross debt includes most forms of debt while ...

  3. CPP tax hike hurts Canadian workers

    Appeared in the Toronto Sun, January 6, 2021 The economy continues to struggle due to COVID and the lockdowns, so workers should be particularly unhappy to start 2021 with a tax hike. The combined employer/employee Canada Pension Plan tax rate rose from ...

  4. ‘Fair Deal’ panel right to consider Alberta withdrawal from CPP

    Appeared in the Calgary Sun, June 19, 2020 On Wednesday, Alberta’s “Fair Deal” panel released its report, which recommends that Alberta develop a plan to withdraw from the Canada Pension Plan (CPP). Premier Kenney endorsed the recommendation, noting that ...

  5. So how broke is the Canada Pension Plan?

    Earlier this week Statistics Canada issued “Public Sector Universe 2018,” which has a cosmic ring to it, but in fact is simply—though in a complicated way—“a comprehensive list of institutional units that” comprise Canada’s public sector, ...

  6. Contributions to the CPP—comparing provinces

    Alberta’s $27.9 billion net contribution over this period is almost four times greater than Ontario’s. ...

  7. Albertans Make Disproportionate Contributions to National Programs: The Canada Pension Plan as a Case Study

    Alberta disproportionately contributes to a host of national and federal programs. This bulletin examines the province’s contributions to the Canada Pension Plan. In 2017, Alberta workers represented 16.5 percent of the total contributions to the ...

  8. Advertisements mislead Canadians about the CPP investment board

    Canadians watching NFL wild-card playoff games this past weekend likely saw the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board’s (CPPIB) new advertisement at least once. (My informal count was eight times over four games.) The timing of the new ...

  9. Recent column about expanded CPP ignores costs to Canadian workers

    The expanded CPP’s overall rate of return for workers is a meagre 2.5 per cent. ...

  10. Risk and Reward in Public Sector Pension Plans: A Taxpayer’s Perspective

    The most striking feature of Canada’s retirement system is arguably the large and growing gap between pensions in the public and private sectors. Eighty percent of public sector workers participate in defined benefit (DB) pension plans. Only ten percent ...