Toronto Star

CPP changes will take time to appear

Those who will see the full benefits of enhancemen­t haven’t yet started careers

- CRAIG WONG

OTTAWA— Proposed changes to the Canada Pension Plan will help significan­tly boost retirement income for Canadians, but only long after they are implemente­d.

Those already in the workforce, especially those closer to the end of their working lives, shouldn’t be looking to the enhancemen­ts for help in retirement, experts say.

Investment specialist Robert Kazan of Alterna Savings suggests that those who will benefit fully from the changes haven’t even started their careers.

“It’s really going to be the teenagers, those born after the year 2000, who are going to get the full benefit, more so than the middle-career earners or pre-retirement workers,” he says.

The tentative changes will see the amount Canadians receive from CPP increase from one-quarter of their eligible earnings to one-third. The maximum amount of income covered by CPP will also increase by 14 per cent to roughly $82,700 by 2025. That means workers will see more deducted from their paycheques to pay for the enhanced benefits in retirement.

But the phase-in is going to take time and won’t even begin until 2019, with full implementa­tion scheduled for 2025. That means anyone retiring before 2019 won’t see any difference and those retiring shortly after that will see little improvemen­t.

Cynthia Caskey, a vice-president at TD Wealth, says it’s important to remember that CPP should only be part of your retirement plan.

Even combined with Old Age Security, it is probably not enough to provide what many would see as a com- fortable retirement.

“It is still very important to think about saving on your own and your own savings strategies,” she said.

The average monthly retirement pension at age 65 paid by CPP this year is $664.57, a little more than half the maximum of $1,092.50.

Caskey also noted that while young people will benefit from the improvemen­ts to CPP, they will also face the challenge of entering the workforce later than earlier generation­s. In the past, she said Canadians worked for perhaps 40 years and had 20 years in retirement, but now workers aren’t entering the workforce until they are older and can expect to live longer.

“It is still very important to think about saving on your own and your own savings strategies.” CYNTHIA CASKEY VICE-PRESIDENT, TD WEALTH

“Because of the longevity, you could be in retirement for 25 or 30 years,” Caskey said. “So the importance of saving is even more important.”

Kazan says there are two ways to look at what a larger CPP will mean for the investment strategies of young Canadians.

“There’s the one school of thought, (those) who look at their Canada Pension Plan, their Old Age Security, their workplace pensions as a safe haven . . . which then facilitate­s or allows them to take on more risk on the investment side of things,” he said. In the other school of thought are investors who want to take as little risk as possible and can be even more conservati­ve now knowing that they will receive a larger CPP payment in retirement.

Kazan says which is right for you will depend on your risk tolerance and financial plan.

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