Alberta Pension Plan
- an idea whose time has come
www.app.ca
There is growing demand in Alberta for the provincial government to opt out of the Canada Pension Plan and create an Alberta Pension Plan.
The idea is not new. People in politics and government have been talking about it for over 10 years. Most recently, former Alberta Treasurer Stockwell Day was seriously considering it when he left Alberta for federal politics in 2000.
Since then, many of Alberta's civic, business and municipal groups have started pressing the provincial government to proceed. The sooner Albertans start to invest in their own provincial plan, the better off we will be, thus creating a multi-billion dollar Alberta Pension Fund.
Why opt out of the Canada Pension Plan?
Why an Alberta Pension Plan would work better (see www.app.ca)
Questions and answers
Would people who paid into the CPP lose
their benefits?
No, there would be no interruption or reduction in benefits. Benefits would
remain the same under the Alberta Pension Plan as under the Canada Pension Plan.
This is required by law as well by common decency.
Could people move around the country,
working and retiring where they wish, without losing their benefits?
Yes. Transferring pension benefits in and out of Quebec has never been difficult,
even though the plans are completely separate. The same rules would apply to
Alberta.
Doesn't this open up a huge new financial
liability for Albertans?
No. Albertans are already contributing more than their fair share to the enormous
unfunded liability of the federal plan. By transferring their share of the liability
from the federal to the provincial government, along with their premium contributions,
Albertans can handle the problem themselves, as they did the provincial debt
that built up in the 1980s and early 1990s.
Isn't a national plan safer? What happens
if Alberta's economy falls apart?
Even in a worst-case scenario, with the economy permanently as weak as it was
after Trudeau imposed the National Energy Program, Albertans would still come
out ahead with their own pension plan. Alberta has a high natural birth rate,
high workforce participation and low reliance on immigration. And just as Quebec
uses the QPP to help preserve its culture, so should Alberta. (www.app.ca)
Wouldn't a smaller provincial plan cost
proportionately more to administer than a large national one?
According to the best research, the increased cost of management is more than
offset by the advantage of keeping Alberta contributions in a separate plan.
The net savings, with all factors considered, would have amounted to $530 million
in 2001, according to William Robson of the C.D. Howe Institute.
Can we trust the provincial government
to do this right?
Yes. As with the Canada and Quebec plans, politicians will not use the pension
funds of the electorate for short-term political gain. Even Chretien didn't
do that with the new CPP Investment Fund.
Isn't this a move toward separatism?
No. It's a way of restoring the autonomy the founders of our country intended
all provinces to have when they wrote the Canadian constitution in 1867.
How would this affect premiums in the
rest of the country?
The effect in Quebec will be nil, because it operates its own plan. Premiums
elsewhere in English Canada might have to rise slightly above 10% (from the
present 9.9%) to compensate for Alberta's departure.
For more information go to: www.app.ca