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Economic security in an aging Canadian population

20 Jul 2011

This paper has been written to bring up to date materials in a monograph that was a part of the Butterworths series of monographs in social gerontology, in particular, the 1991 monograph entitled: Economic Security in an Aging Population (Brown, 1991). The paper reports on research that indicates that today's retirees are doing very well in terms of their replacement ratios and that Canadian poverty rates among the elderly are low relative to OECD (Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development) countries. Government-sponsored plans have been strengthened either through explicit expansion (e.g., the Guaranteed Income Supplement (GIS)) or through the reform of the Canada/Quebec Pension Plans (C/QPP). Also important is the maturation of Employer-sponsored pension plans. However, for the latter, coverage rates are down. This has created concern that future generations of Canadian retirees may not be able to experience the standard of living that is the reality for today's elderly. The paper concludes that the aging of the population is not the cause of the increased cost of health care and social security today. Even by 2031, when the entire baby boom will be aged 65+, the impact of population aging on costs will be manageable. The paper also discusses the affordability of these systems if the normal age at retirement were to rise.
health government politics economy finance investment canada ageing economic security employment labour retirement tax pension government budget old age security older people health care cost retirees social security system wage and benefit rrsps levy canada pension plan rrsp cpp investment board income maintenance programs tfsas registered retirement savings plans tfsa active management registered pension plans baby boom canada/quebec pension plans

Authors

Brown, Robert L

Pages
46
Published in
Canada

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