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Canada Pension Plan

The Canada Pension Plan (CPP; French: Régime de pensions du Canada) is a contributory, earnings-related social insurance program. It forms one of the two major components of Canada's public retirement income system, the other component being Old Age Security (OAS). Other parts of Canada's retirement system are private pensions, either employer-sponsored or from tax-deferred individual savings (known in Canada as a registered retirement savings plan).[1] As of Jun 30, 2022, the CPP Investment Board manages over C$523 billion in investment assets for the Canada Pension Plan on behalf of 21 million Canadians.[2] CPPIB is one of the world's biggest pension funds.[3]

Description edit

The CPP mandates all employed Canadians who are 18 years of age and over to contribute a prescribed portion of their earnings income (with an equal matching amount contributed by their employers) to a federally administered pension plan. The plan is administered by Employment and Social Development Canada on behalf of employees in all provinces and territories except Quebec, which operates an equivalent plan, the Quebec Pension Plan. Because the Constitutional authority for pensions is shared between the provincial and federal governments, stewardship for the CPP is jointly shared. As a result, major changes to the CPP (including those that alter how benefits are calculated) require the approval of at least seven Canadian provinces representing at least two-thirds of the country's population.[4]

Provinces may choose to opt out of the Canada Pension Plan; as Quebec did in 1965, but must offer a comparable plan to its residents.[5]: §3(1)  Any province may establish an additional/supplementary plan anytime as under section 94A of the Canadian Constitution, pensions are a provincial responsibility.

The CPP Fund is a professionally managed investment fund and it is overseen by the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board (CPPIB), an independent organization that reports to the federal and provincial governments. The CPPIB's investment strategy is guided by a set of principles that emphasize long-term benefits security, a focus on quality, and a commitment to sustainability and responsible investment practices. The CPPIB also regularly reports on its investment performance and activities, and is subject to oversight by the federal and provincial governments.[6]

History edit

The Liberal government of Prime Minister Lester B. Pearson in 1965 first established the Canadian Pension Plan.

Benefits edit

The primary CPP benefit is the monthly retirement pension. Currently, this is equal to 25 per cent of the average earnings on which CPP contributions were made over the entire working life of a contributor from age 18 to 65 in constant dollars. The earnings upon which contributions are made are subject to an annual limit, which, in 2020, is $58,700.[7] However, under changes being phased in by 2025, the pension benefit will rise to 33.33 per cent of earnings on which contributions were made, and the maximum amount of income covered by the CPP will rise by 14 percent from the projected 2025 limit of $69,700 to $79,400.[8]

The CPP enhancement will serve as a top-up to the existing, or base, CPP. For individuals who work and make contributions in 2019 or later, enhanced components of benefits will be calculated and added to the base portion of the benefit. These calculations are similar, but follow different formulae.

When calculating the base portion of the CPP, there is a general drop out provision[9] that enables the lower-earnings years in a contributor's contributory period to be dropped from the calculation of the average. Since 2014, the lowest 17 percent of earnings are dropped in this way, accounting for up to eight years of contributory earnings.

Benefits under the CPP enhancement will be calculated based on a forty-year period, taking the best 40 years to calculate the benefit. This calculation effectively allows seven years to be dropped out of the benefit calculation (for an individual who begins contributing at age 18 and ends at age 65).

In October 2018, average monthly benefits for new retirement pension (taken at age 65) was just over $664.00 per month and the maximum amount in 2019 was $1,154.58 per month. Monthly benefits are adjusted every year based on the Consumer Price Index. CPP benefit payments are taxable as ordinary income.

The standard age to receive the retirement pension is age 65, however, individuals may begin collecting a permanently reduced pension as early as 60, or defer until age 70 to increase the monthly payment. For those who take the pension early (the majority), the reduction factor is 0.6 per cent for each month you receive it before age 65 (to a maximum reduction of 36 per cent at age 60). For those who defer, the adjustment rate is 0.7 per cent for each month that one delays in receiving it up to a maximum increase of 42 per cent at age 70. There is no financial benefit to delaying beyond age 70.[10]

The CPP also provides disability pensions to eligible workers under the age of 65 who become disabled in a severe and prolonged fashion, and a monthly survivor's pension to the spouse or common-law partners of contributors who die (having made sufficient contributions).

An application must be filed at least six months in advance in order to receive CPP benefits. If an application for disability pension is denied, an appeal can be made for reconsideration, and then to the Social Security Tribunal. All CPP benefits in pay are indexed annually to the Consumer Price Index.

Contribution rates edit

1966 to 1996 edit

From 1966 to 1986, the contribution rate was 3.6 per cent. The rate was 1.8 per cent for employees (and a like amount for their employers) and 3.6 per cent in respect of self-employed earnings. Contribution rates started rising by 0.2 per cent per year in 1987. By 1997, this had reached combined rates of 6 per cent of pensionable earnings.

1996 reforms edit

By the mid-1990s, the 3.6 per cent contribution rate was not sufficient to keep up with Canada's aging population.[11] and it was concluded that the "pay-as-you-go" structure would lead to excessively high contribution rates within 20 years or so, due to Canada's changing demographics, increased life expectancy of Canadians, a changing economy, benefit improvements, and increased usage of disability benefits (all as referenced in the Chief Actuary's study of April 2007, noted above). The same study reports that the reserve fund was expected to run out by 2015. This impending pension crisis sparked an extensive review by the federal and provincial governments in 1996. As a part of the major review process, the federal government actively conducted consultations with the Canadian public to solicit suggestions, recommendations, and proposals on how the CPP could be restructured to achieve sustainability once again. As a direct result of this public consultation process and internal review of the CPP, the following key changes were proposed and jointly approved by the Federal and provincial governments in 1997:

  • Increase total CPP annual contribution rates (employer/employee combined) from 6 per cent of pensionable earnings in 1997 to 9.9 per cent by 2003.
  • Continuously seek out ways to reduce CPP administration and operating costs.
  • Move towards a hybrid structure to take advantage of investment earnings on accumulated assets. Instead of a "pay-as-you-go" structure, the CPP is expected to be 20 per cent funded by 2014, such funding ratio to constantly increase thereafter towards 30 per cent by 2075 (that is, the CPP Reserve Fund will equal 30 per cent of the "liabilities" - or accrued pension obligations).
  • Create the CPP Investment Board (CPPIB).
  • Review the CPP and CPPIB every 3 years.

As of 2019, the prescribed employee contribution rate was 4.95 per cent of a salaried worker's gross employment income between $3,500 and $57,400, up to a maximum contribution of $2,668. The employer matches the employee contribution, effectively doubling the contributions of the employee. Self-employed workers must pay both halves of the contribution, or 9.9 per cent of pensionable income, when filing their income tax return. These rates have been in effect since 2003.

2017 reforms edit

The Federal Government and its provincial counterparts moved to enhance the Canada Pension Plan to provide working Canadians with more income in retirement.[12] These changes were principally motivated by the declining share of the workforce that was covered by an employer defined-benefit pension plan, which had fallen from 48 per cent of men in 1971 to 25 per cent by 2011.[12] They were given additional impetus by moves on the part of the government of Ontario to launch the Ontario Retirement Pension Plan, a supplementary provincial pension plan intended to begin in 2018.[12]

Unlike the existing, or base, CPP, the enhancement to the Canada Pension Plan will be fully funded, meaning that benefits under the enhancement will slowly accrue each year as individuals work and make contributions. Additionally, the enhancement of the Canada Pension Plan will be phased-in over a period of seven years, starting in 2019. When fully mature, the enhanced CPP will provide a replacement rate of one third (33.33 per cent) of covered earnings, up from the quarter (25 per cent) provided prior to the enhancement. Additionally, the maximum amount of income covered by the CPP will increase by 14 per cent by 2025 (projected by the Chief Actuary of Canada to be $79,400 in 2025, compared to the projected normal limit of $69,700 in the same year in the 28th Actuarial Report on the CPP[8]). The combination of the increased replacement rate and increased earnings limit will result in individuals receiving retirement pensions 33 per cent to 50 per cent higher, depending on their earnings across their working years. (The maximum retirement pension will increase by 50 per cent, but will require 40 years of contributions on earnings at the new maximum). Workers earning the 2016 maximum covered wage of $54,900 a year would receive an additional $4,390 annually (approximately $365.83 monthly).[12]

To finance the expanded pensions and maintain the soundness of the plan, contributions to the CPP from workers and their employers will each rise 1 per cent from current levels, to 5.95 per cent over the existing band of covered earnings. This increase will be phased in over 5 years, starting in 2019. The increase to the earnings threshold will be phased in over 2 years, starting in 2024. Workers and their employers will contribute 4 per cent on earnings in this range (which is to say earnings above the normal earnings limit and below the new increased one). To ease the impact of the increased contribution on near-term disposable income, worker contributions will become tax-deductible.[12]

Funding edit

Description edit

The base CPP is funded on a "steady-state" basis, with its current contribution rate set so that it will remain constant for the next 75 years, by accumulating a reserve fund sufficient to stabilize the asset/expenditure and funding ratios over time. Such a system is a hybrid between a fully funded one and a "pay-as-you-go" plan. In other words, assets held in the CPP fund are by themselves insufficient to pay for all future benefits accrued to date but sufficient to prevent contributions from rising any further. While a sustainable path for this particular plan, given the indefinite existence of a government, it is not typical of other public or private sector pension plans. A study published in April 2007 by the CPP's chief actuary showed that this type of funding method is "robust and appropriate" given reasonable assumptions about future conditions.[13]

The enhancement to the CPP will be fully funded, such that each generation will contribute and pay for the benefits they receive. Contributions made to the enhancement will be directed into a separate account.

The chief actuary submits a report to Parliament every three years on the financial status of the plan. Future reports will report on both the base and enhanced components of the Plan.

Assets edit

As noted in the 27th Actuarial Report on the Canada Pension Plan, if one uses the 'closed group approach', the Canada Pension Plan has an enormous unfunded liability. As at December 31, 2015, the unfunded liability was $884 billion, which is the difference between CPP's liabilities of $1.169 trillion and the CPP's assets of $285 billion.[14]

Unfunded liability edit

While the unfunded liability has been increasing with every published Actuarial Report, the assets as a percentage of liabilities using the closed group approach has also been increasing since the 1996 reforms. The unfunded liability reported in the last few reports are:

Year Actuarial Report Unfunded Liability Assets/Liabilities
1997 17th $428 billion 7.8%
2000 18th $443 billion[15] 9.0%
2003 21st $516 billion 11.6%
2006 23rd $620 billion 15.5%
2009 25th $748 billion[16] 14.5%
2012 26th $830 billion[17] 17.4%
2015 27th $884 billion[14] 24.4%
2018 30th $885 billion 29.6%
2021 31st $1,103.2 billion[18] 33.5%

Using the 'open group approach' ("one that includes all current and future participants of a plan, where the plan is considered to be ongoing into the future, that is, over an extended time horizon") the plan is reported to have assets in excess of $2.5 trillion.[19] This approach uses a different definition of the term "assets". "Assets" are the sum of: (i) the CPP's current assets and (ii) the present value of future contributions for the next 150 years, totalling $2.544 trillion.[19]

Unlike most pension plans, the unfunded liability is not reported on the balance sheet of the Canada Pension Plan's financial statements.[20] Consequently, the balance sheet reports that the CPP's assets exceed its liabilities by $269 billion as at March 31, 2015.

CPP investment board edit

Under the direction of then Finance Minister Paul Martin, the CPP Investment Board (CPPIB) was created in 1997 as an organization independent of the government to monitor and invest the funds held by the CPP. In turn, the CPP Investment Board created the CPP Reserve Fund. The CPP Investment Board is a crown corporation created by an Act of Parliament. It reports quarterly on its performance, has a professional management team to oversee the operation of various aspects of the CPP reserve fund and also to plan changes in direction, and a board of directors that is accountable to but independent from the federal government. The board reports annually to Parliament through the federal Minister of Finance.[21]

Quebec Pension Plan edit

Quebec is the only province in Canada that opted out of the CPP in which the government of Quebec runs its own pension program. The Quebec Pension Plan (QPP; French: Régime des rentes du Québec; RRQ) is the province of Quebec's own version of the Canada Pension Plan. The QPP is managed by Retraite Québec, which was formed from a merger of the Commission administrative des régimes de retraite et d'assurances (CARRA) and the Régie des rentes du Québec (RRQ) in 2016. Closely mirroring the CPP, the QPP is a contributory earnings-related pension plan that pays benefits in the event of the earner becoming disabled, retiring, or dying. Both Quebec and the federal government tax benefits paid from the QPP.

Increase in contribution rate edit

The contribution rate was 9.9 per cent prior to 2012. In accordance with the 2011-12 Budget of the Government of Quebec, the contribution rates were increased by 0.15 per cent per year for six years from 2012 to 2017. Consequently, the contribution rate increased to 10.8 per cent for 2017 and subsequent years.[22][23][24]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ . Archived from the original on 2009-06-09.
  2. ^ "CPP Investments Net Assets Total $523 Billion at First Quarter Fiscal 2023". cppinvestments.com. Aug 11, 2022. Retrieved August 24, 2022.
  3. ^ Thompson, Jennifer (May 18, 2017). "Canada Pension Plan triples returns on global markets rally". ft.com. Archived from the original on 2022-12-10.
  4. ^ Finance, Government of Canada, Department of. . www.fin.gc.ca. Archived from the original on 2017-12-22. Retrieved 2017-12-19.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  5. ^ "Canada Pension Plan (R.S.C., 1985, c. C-8)". 2018-12-15. Retrieved 2019-11-16.
  6. ^ "CPP Investments".
  7. ^ Service Canada. Canada Pension Plan Retirement Pension (booklet - March 2014), ISPB-147-03-14E.
  8. ^ a b . Osfi-bsif.gc.ca. p. 28. Archived from the original on 18 October 2018. Retrieved 18 January 2019.
  9. ^ Please select all that apply (2015-10-08). "Canada Pension Plan - Eligibility - Canada.ca". Servicecanada.gc.ca. Retrieved 2019-01-18.
  10. ^ Service Canada. Canada Pension Plan Retirement Pension (booklet - March 2014), ISPB-147-03-14E
  11. ^ "18th Actuarial Report on the CPP" (PDF). Osfi-bsif.gc.ca. p. 51. Retrieved 18 January 2019.
  12. ^ a b c d e McFarland, Janet; McGugan, Ian (5 January 2017). "A new premium on retirement". The Globe and Mail. Retrieved 6 March 2017.
  13. ^ "Optimal Funding of the Canada Pension Plan: Actuarial Study" (PDF). Osfi-bsif.gc.ca. Office of the Superintendent of Financial Institutions Canada. p. 7. Retrieved 18 January 2019.
  14. ^ a b "27th Actuarial Report on the Canada Pension Plan" (PDF). Osfi-bsif.gc.ca. p. 48 (bottom footnote). Retrieved 18 January 2019.
  15. ^ Page 113 of the 18th Actuarial Report on the Canada Pension Plan http://www.osfi-bsif.gc.ca/Eng/Docs/CPP1801.pdf
  16. ^ Page 73 of the 26th Actuarial Report on the Canada Pension Plan http://osfi-bsif.gc.ca/eng/docs/cpp25.pdf
  17. ^ Page 48 (bottom footnote) of the 26th Actuarial Report on the Canada Pension Plan http://www.osfi-bsif.gc.ca/Eng/Docs/cpp26.pdf
  18. ^ Page 187-188 of the 31st Actuarial Report on the Canada Pension Plan https://www.osfi-bsif.gc.ca/Eng/Docs/CPP31.pdf
  19. ^ a b Page 48 of the 27th Actuarial Report on the Canada Pension Plan http://www.osfi-bsif.gc.ca/Eng/Docs/cpp27.pdf
  20. ^ Page 6.61 of volume 1 of the 2015 Public Accounts of the Government of Canada - http://www.tpsgc-pwgsc.gc.ca/recgen/cpc-pac/2015/pdf/2015-vol1-eng.pdf 2016-08-03 at the Wayback Machine
  21. ^ "Canada Pension Plan mulls Yahoo buy, report says - Business - CBC News". Cbc.ca. 2011-10-20. Retrieved 2014-06-04.
  22. ^ See page 16 - "Meeting the Expectations of Quebers of Every Generation" http://www.budget.finances.gouv.qc.ca/budget/2011-2012/en/documents/retirement.pdf
  23. ^ Government of Quebec http://www.rrq.gouv.qc.ca/en/employeur/role_rrq/Pages/cotisations.aspx 2016-09-13 at the Wayback Machine
  24. ^ . Province of Quebec. Archived from the original on 27 August 2017. Retrieved 27 August 2017.

External links edit

  • Canada Pension Plan Act
  • CPP and payroll calculations
  • CPP Investment Board website
  • CPP website
  • 2017 Annual Report
  • 21st Actuarial Report (as at December 31, 2003)
  • 23rd Actuarial Report (as at December 31, 2006)
  • 25th Actuarial Report (as at December 31, 2009)
  • 26th Actuarial Report (as at December 31, 2012)
  • 27th Actuarial Report (as at December 31, 2015)
  • The Régie des rentes website

canada, pension, plan, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, marc. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Canada Pension Plan news newspapers books scholar JSTOR March 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Canada Pension Plan CPP French Regime de pensions du Canada is a contributory earnings related social insurance program It forms one of the two major components of Canada s public retirement income system the other component being Old Age Security OAS Other parts of Canada s retirement system are private pensions either employer sponsored or from tax deferred individual savings known in Canada as a registered retirement savings plan 1 As of Jun 30 2022 the CPP Investment Board manages over C 523 billion in investment assets for the Canada Pension Plan on behalf of 21 million Canadians 2 CPPIB is one of the world s biggest pension funds 3 Contents 1 Description 2 History 3 Benefits 4 Contribution rates 4 1 1966 to 1996 4 2 1996 reforms 4 3 2017 reforms 5 Funding 5 1 Description 5 2 Assets 5 3 Unfunded liability 6 CPP investment board 7 Quebec Pension Plan 7 1 Increase in contribution rate 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksDescription editThe CPP mandates all employed Canadians who are 18 years of age and over to contribute a prescribed portion of their earnings income with an equal matching amount contributed by their employers to a federally administered pension plan The plan is administered by Employment and Social Development Canada on behalf of employees in all provinces and territories except Quebec which operates an equivalent plan the Quebec Pension Plan Because the Constitutional authority for pensions is shared between the provincial and federal governments stewardship for the CPP is jointly shared As a result major changes to the CPP including those that alter how benefits are calculated require the approval of at least seven Canadian provinces representing at least two thirds of the country s population 4 Provinces may choose to opt out of the Canada Pension Plan as Quebec did in 1965 but must offer a comparable plan to its residents 5 3 1 Any province may establish an additional supplementary plan anytime as under section 94A of the Canadian Constitution pensions are a provincial responsibility The CPP Fund is a professionally managed investment fund and it is overseen by the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board CPPIB an independent organization that reports to the federal and provincial governments The CPPIB s investment strategy is guided by a set of principles that emphasize long term benefits security a focus on quality and a commitment to sustainability and responsible investment practices The CPPIB also regularly reports on its investment performance and activities and is subject to oversight by the federal and provincial governments 6 History editThe Liberal government of Prime Minister Lester B Pearson in 1965 first established the Canadian Pension Plan Benefits editThe primary CPP benefit is the monthly retirement pension Currently this is equal to 25 per cent of the average earnings on which CPP contributions were made over the entire working life of a contributor from age 18 to 65 in constant dollars The earnings upon which contributions are made are subject to an annual limit which in 2020 is 58 700 7 However under changes being phased in by 2025 the pension benefit will rise to 33 33 per cent of earnings on which contributions were made and the maximum amount of income covered by the CPP will rise by 14 percent from the projected 2025 limit of 69 700 to 79 400 8 The CPP enhancement will serve as a top up to the existing or base CPP For individuals who work and make contributions in 2019 or later enhanced components of benefits will be calculated and added to the base portion of the benefit These calculations are similar but follow different formulae When calculating the base portion of the CPP there is a general drop out provision 9 that enables the lower earnings years in a contributor s contributory period to be dropped from the calculation of the average Since 2014 the lowest 17 percent of earnings are dropped in this way accounting for up to eight years of contributory earnings Benefits under the CPP enhancement will be calculated based on a forty year period taking the best 40 years to calculate the benefit This calculation effectively allows seven years to be dropped out of the benefit calculation for an individual who begins contributing at age 18 and ends at age 65 In October 2018 average monthly benefits for new retirement pension taken at age 65 was just over 664 00 per month and the maximum amount in 2019 was 1 154 58 per month Monthly benefits are adjusted every year based on the Consumer Price Index CPP benefit payments are taxable as ordinary income The standard age to receive the retirement pension is age 65 however individuals may begin collecting a permanently reduced pension as early as 60 or defer until age 70 to increase the monthly payment For those who take the pension early the majority the reduction factor is 0 6 per cent for each month you receive it before age 65 to a maximum reduction of 36 per cent at age 60 For those who defer the adjustment rate is 0 7 per cent for each month that one delays in receiving it up to a maximum increase of 42 per cent at age 70 There is no financial benefit to delaying beyond age 70 10 The CPP also provides disability pensions to eligible workers under the age of 65 who become disabled in a severe and prolonged fashion and a monthly survivor s pension to the spouse or common law partners of contributors who die having made sufficient contributions An application must be filed at least six months in advance in order to receive CPP benefits If an application for disability pension is denied an appeal can be made for reconsideration and then to the Social Security Tribunal All CPP benefits in pay are indexed annually to the Consumer Price Index Contribution rates edit1966 to 1996 edit From 1966 to 1986 the contribution rate was 3 6 per cent The rate was 1 8 per cent for employees and a like amount for their employers and 3 6 per cent in respect of self employed earnings Contribution rates started rising by 0 2 per cent per year in 1987 By 1997 this had reached combined rates of 6 per cent of pensionable earnings 1996 reforms edit By the mid 1990s the 3 6 per cent contribution rate was not sufficient to keep up with Canada s aging population 11 and it was concluded that the pay as you go structure would lead to excessively high contribution rates within 20 years or so due to Canada s changing demographics increased life expectancy of Canadians a changing economy benefit improvements and increased usage of disability benefits all as referenced in the Chief Actuary s study of April 2007 noted above The same study reports that the reserve fund was expected to run out by 2015 This impending pension crisis sparked an extensive review by the federal and provincial governments in 1996 As a part of the major review process the federal government actively conducted consultations with the Canadian public to solicit suggestions recommendations and proposals on how the CPP could be restructured to achieve sustainability once again As a direct result of this public consultation process and internal review of the CPP the following key changes were proposed and jointly approved by the Federal and provincial governments in 1997 Increase total CPP annual contribution rates employer employee combined from 6 per cent of pensionable earnings in 1997 to 9 9 per cent by 2003 Continuously seek out ways to reduce CPP administration and operating costs Move towards a hybrid structure to take advantage of investment earnings on accumulated assets Instead of a pay as you go structure the CPP is expected to be 20 per cent funded by 2014 such funding ratio to constantly increase thereafter towards 30 per cent by 2075 that is the CPP Reserve Fund will equal 30 per cent of the liabilities or accrued pension obligations Create the CPP Investment Board CPPIB Review the CPP and CPPIB every 3 years As of 2019 the prescribed employee contribution rate was 4 95 per cent of a salaried worker s gross employment income between 3 500 and 57 400 up to a maximum contribution of 2 668 The employer matches the employee contribution effectively doubling the contributions of the employee Self employed workers must pay both halves of the contribution or 9 9 per cent of pensionable income when filing their income tax return These rates have been in effect since 2003 2017 reforms edit The Federal Government and its provincial counterparts moved to enhance the Canada Pension Plan to provide working Canadians with more income in retirement 12 These changes were principally motivated by the declining share of the workforce that was covered by an employer defined benefit pension plan which had fallen from 48 per cent of men in 1971 to 25 per cent by 2011 12 They were given additional impetus by moves on the part of the government of Ontario to launch the Ontario Retirement Pension Plan a supplementary provincial pension plan intended to begin in 2018 12 Unlike the existing or base CPP the enhancement to the Canada Pension Plan will be fully funded meaning that benefits under the enhancement will slowly accrue each year as individuals work and make contributions Additionally the enhancement of the Canada Pension Plan will be phased in over a period of seven years starting in 2019 When fully mature the enhanced CPP will provide a replacement rate of one third 33 33 per cent of covered earnings up from the quarter 25 per cent provided prior to the enhancement Additionally the maximum amount of income covered by the CPP will increase by 14 per cent by 2025 projected by the Chief Actuary of Canada to be 79 400 in 2025 compared to the projected normal limit of 69 700 in the same year in the 28th Actuarial Report on the CPP 8 The combination of the increased replacement rate and increased earnings limit will result in individuals receiving retirement pensions 33 per cent to 50 per cent higher depending on their earnings across their working years The maximum retirement pension will increase by 50 per cent but will require 40 years of contributions on earnings at the new maximum Workers earning the 2016 maximum covered wage of 54 900 a year would receive an additional 4 390 annually approximately 365 83 monthly 12 To finance the expanded pensions and maintain the soundness of the plan contributions to the CPP from workers and their employers will each rise 1 per cent from current levels to 5 95 per cent over the existing band of covered earnings This increase will be phased in over 5 years starting in 2019 The increase to the earnings threshold will be phased in over 2 years starting in 2024 Workers and their employers will contribute 4 per cent on earnings in this range which is to say earnings above the normal earnings limit and below the new increased one To ease the impact of the increased contribution on near term disposable income worker contributions will become tax deductible 12 Funding editDescription edit The base CPP is funded on a steady state basis with its current contribution rate set so that it will remain constant for the next 75 years by accumulating a reserve fund sufficient to stabilize the asset expenditure and funding ratios over time Such a system is a hybrid between a fully funded one and a pay as you go plan In other words assets held in the CPP fund are by themselves insufficient to pay for all future benefits accrued to date but sufficient to prevent contributions from rising any further While a sustainable path for this particular plan given the indefinite existence of a government it is not typical of other public or private sector pension plans A study published in April 2007 by the CPP s chief actuary showed that this type of funding method is robust and appropriate given reasonable assumptions about future conditions 13 The enhancement to the CPP will be fully funded such that each generation will contribute and pay for the benefits they receive Contributions made to the enhancement will be directed into a separate account The chief actuary submits a report to Parliament every three years on the financial status of the plan Future reports will report on both the base and enhanced components of the Plan Assets edit As noted in the 27th Actuarial Report on the Canada Pension Plan if one uses the closed group approach the Canada Pension Plan has an enormous unfunded liability As at December 31 2015 the unfunded liability was 884 billion which is the difference between CPP s liabilities of 1 169 trillion and the CPP s assets of 285 billion 14 Unfunded liability edit While the unfunded liability has been increasing with every published Actuarial Report the assets as a percentage of liabilities using the closed group approach has also been increasing since the 1996 reforms The unfunded liability reported in the last few reports are Year Actuarial Report Unfunded Liability Assets Liabilities1997 17th 428 billion 7 8 2000 18th 443 billion 15 9 0 2003 21st 516 billion 11 6 2006 23rd 620 billion 15 5 2009 25th 748 billion 16 14 5 2012 26th 830 billion 17 17 4 2015 27th 884 billion 14 24 4 2018 30th 885 billion 29 6 2021 31st 1 103 2 billion 18 33 5 Using the open group approach one that includes all current and future participants of a plan where the plan is considered to be ongoing into the future that is over an extended time horizon the plan is reported to have assets in excess of 2 5 trillion 19 This approach uses a different definition of the term assets Assets are the sum of i the CPP s current assets and ii the present value of future contributions for the next 150 years totalling 2 544 trillion 19 Unlike most pension plans the unfunded liability is not reported on the balance sheet of the Canada Pension Plan s financial statements 20 Consequently the balance sheet reports that the CPP s assets exceed its liabilities by 269 billion as at March 31 2015 CPP investment board editMain article CPP Investment Board Under the direction of then Finance Minister Paul Martin the CPP Investment Board CPPIB was created in 1997 as an organization independent of the government to monitor and invest the funds held by the CPP In turn the CPP Investment Board created the CPP Reserve Fund The CPP Investment Board is a crown corporation created by an Act of Parliament It reports quarterly on its performance has a professional management team to oversee the operation of various aspects of the CPP reserve fund and also to plan changes in direction and a board of directors that is accountable to but independent from the federal government The board reports annually to Parliament through the federal Minister of Finance 21 Quebec Pension Plan editQuebec is the only province in Canada that opted out of the CPP in which the government of Quebec runs its own pension program The Quebec Pension Plan QPP French Regime des rentes du Quebec RRQ is the province of Quebec s own version of the Canada Pension Plan The QPP is managed by Retraite Quebec which was formed from a merger of the Commission administrative des regimes de retraite et d assurances CARRA and the Regie des rentes du Quebec RRQ in 2016 Closely mirroring the CPP the QPP is a contributory earnings related pension plan that pays benefits in the event of the earner becoming disabled retiring or dying Both Quebec and the federal government tax benefits paid from the QPP Increase in contribution rate edit The contribution rate was 9 9 per cent prior to 2012 In accordance with the 2011 12 Budget of the Government of Quebec the contribution rates were increased by 0 15 per cent per year for six years from 2012 to 2017 Consequently the contribution rate increased to 10 8 per cent for 2017 and subsequent years 22 23 24 See also editFiscal imbalance in Australia Pensions in CanadaReferences edit Canada s Retirement Income System Archived from the original on 2009 06 09 CPP Investments Net Assets Total 523 Billion at First Quarter Fiscal 2023 cppinvestments com Aug 11 2022 Retrieved August 24 2022 Thompson Jennifer May 18 2017 Canada Pension Plan triples returns on global markets rally ft com Archived from the original on 2022 12 10 Finance Government of Canada Department of Backgrounder Canada Pension Plan CPP Enhancement www fin gc ca Archived from the original on 2017 12 22 Retrieved 2017 12 19 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Canada Pension Plan R S C 1985 c C 8 2018 12 15 Retrieved 2019 11 16 CPP Investments Service Canada Canada Pension Plan Retirement Pension booklet March 2014 ISPB 147 03 14E a b Actuarial Report on the Canada Pension Plan Osfi bsif gc ca p 28 Archived from the original on 18 October 2018 Retrieved 18 January 2019 Please select all that apply 2015 10 08 Canada Pension Plan Eligibility Canada ca Servicecanada gc ca Retrieved 2019 01 18 Service Canada Canada Pension Plan Retirement Pension booklet March 2014 ISPB 147 03 14E 18th Actuarial Report on the CPP PDF Osfi bsif gc ca p 51 Retrieved 18 January 2019 a b c d e McFarland Janet McGugan Ian 5 January 2017 A new premium on retirement The Globe and Mail Retrieved 6 March 2017 Optimal Funding of the Canada Pension Plan Actuarial Study PDF Osfi bsif gc ca Office of the Superintendent of Financial Institutions Canada p 7 Retrieved 18 January 2019 a b 27th Actuarial Report on the Canada Pension Plan PDF Osfi bsif gc ca p 48 bottom footnote Retrieved 18 January 2019 Page 113 of the 18th Actuarial Report on the Canada Pension Plan http www osfi bsif gc ca Eng Docs CPP1801 pdf Page 73 of the 26th Actuarial Report on the Canada Pension Plan http osfi bsif gc ca eng docs cpp25 pdf Page 48 bottom footnote of the 26th Actuarial Report on the Canada Pension Plan http www osfi bsif gc ca Eng Docs cpp26 pdf Page 187 188 of the 31st Actuarial Report on the Canada Pension Plan https www osfi bsif gc ca Eng Docs CPP31 pdf a b Page 48 of the 27th Actuarial Report on the Canada Pension Plan http www osfi bsif gc ca Eng Docs cpp27 pdf Page 6 61 of volume 1 of the 2015 Public Accounts of the Government of Canada http www tpsgc pwgsc gc ca recgen cpc pac 2015 pdf 2015 vol1 eng pdf Archived 2016 08 03 at the Wayback Machine Canada Pension Plan mulls Yahoo buy report says Business CBC News Cbc ca 2011 10 20 Retrieved 2014 06 04 See page 16 Meeting the Expectations of Quebers of Every Generation http www budget finances gouv qc ca budget 2011 2012 en documents retirement pdf Government of Quebec http www rrq gouv qc ca en employeur role rrq Pages cotisations aspx Archived 2016 09 13 at the Wayback Machine The Quebec Pension Plan Province of Quebec Archived from the original on 27 August 2017 Retrieved 27 August 2017 External links editCanada Pension Plan Act CPP and payroll calculations CPP Investment Board website CPP website 2017 Annual Report 21st Actuarial Report as at December 31 2003 23rd Actuarial Report as at December 31 2006 25th Actuarial Report as at December 31 2009 26th Actuarial Report as at December 31 2012 27th Actuarial Report as at December 31 2015 The Regie des rentes website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Canada Pension Plan amp oldid 1184668614, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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