7 results found for "guaranteed annual income"
Op-Ed
Published in the Financial Post on June 11, 2011 By William B.P. Robson The recent economic crisis highlighted the weak foundations of defined-benefit (DB) pension and social-security schemes around the world. The Canada Pension Plan appears to have weathered that storm well, and some are advocating an expanded CPP to alleviate risks of low incomes in retirement. Proposals for a bigger CPP that…
Media Release
June 9, 2011 – Expanding the Canada Pension Plan (CPP) is a risky route to addressing Canadian concerns about low incomes in retirement, according to a report released today by the C.D. Howe Institute. In “Don’t Double Down on the CPP: Expansion Advocates Understate the  Plan’s Risks,” author William B.P. Robson says advocates of an expanded CPP as a solution to retirement income worries too…
Op-Ed
Published in the Financial Post on  Jan 31, 2011 By Finn Poschmann Governments can’t leave housing markets alone. And it’s easy to see why — shelter is a necessity, some people even think it’s a right. Others believe that not only is shelter a necessity, but that home ownership is a positive good for society, and one that governments should therefore encourage. Many western countries…
Op-Ed
Published in the Financial Post on April 8, 2011 By Finn Poschmann When Jon Kesselman of Simon Fraser University and I published "A New Option for Retirement Savings: Tax-Prepaid Savings Plans," the roadmap for what was to become TFSAs, we had high hopes for tax free savings accounts. I doubt we would have believed anyone who told us that in less than 10 years' time nearly five million Canadians…
Op-Ed
Published in the National Post on March 22, 2011 By Colin Busby Do you have a sharp pain in your stomach that won't go away? If yes, you may soon visit an emergency room for help. Your next decision is whether to go to Toronto General, Western, St. Michael's, etc., for service. As an aid, the Ontario Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care posts online monthly updates of average ER wait times for…
Op-Ed
Published in The Toronto Star on July 21, 2011 By Benjamin Dachis and Don Dewees After years of concern that Ontario would not have enough electricity, the province has increased generation capacity and now has the problem of periodically having too much electricity. The best way to solve this problem is, perhaps counterintuitively, to pay producers to stop generating. In many hours so far…