April 24th, 2025

NDP introduces plan to protect Albertans’ retirement


By Al Beeber - Lethbridge Herald on March 24, 2023.

LETHBRIDGE HERALDabeeber@lethbridgeherald.com

The NDP will create a legal requirement for a public referendum before any government gives notice to leave the Canada Pension Plan if elected.

That strategy is among others unveiled by Opposition leader Rachel Notley in Calgary Thursday.

An embargoed copy of the paper was given to media on Wednesday.

The paper says Albertans trust the CPP and rely on it for financial security, adding that for many contributing to it is their only contribution towards saving for the future.

The NDP is also proposing to let the private sector, including non-profit organizations, to access two Crown agencies – asset manager AIMCO and the Alberta Pensions Service – to set up their own workplace pensions.

“Many organizations want to deliver workplace pensions, but are limited by a lack of scale and administrative costs. In order to incent the development of private workplace pensions, we propose a new, voluntary model. The Government of Alberta will partner with any private sector employer to establish a workplace pension, and government will defray the marginal cost increase at APS to administer those new pensions. Employers would provide the cash contributions to the pensions, and assets would be invested/managed by AIMCo,” says the paper.

Alberta Pension Services presently provides services to 384,951 Albertans and 506 employers, says the report. The cost is $175 per pension/person annually.

“Adding 100,000 private sector workplace pensions would only cost the Government of Alberta $17.5 million, but would be transformative for the retirement security of Albertans,” says the NDP document.

If the NDP is elected, it intends to create a task force with AIMCO, APS and leaders in the private sector “to refine the model and develop an operational plan for implementation.”

The NDP says it will ensure the task force mission includes a commitment to the lowest barriers to entry for private sector employer participation.

The party is proposing a Defined Contribution pension plan which it says eliminates risk for government and employers, thereby increasing the likelihood of participation.

The NDP is also proposing a return the a model of joint governance for major public sector pension plans, saying workers must have a say on how those plans are government.

The NDP will also remove the power of the Finance Minister to direct individual investments at AIMCO to ensure investment returns are the driving force in decisions.

NDP for Lethbridge West and Finance Critic Shannon Phillips says in a preamble to the plan that “pensions are the cornerstone of this secure retirement – but for many Albertans they are getting further and further out of reach. Faced with rising costs and an uncertain jobs economy, it’s often retirement savings that are first to go. After all, there’s no winner when a parent is forced to choose between saving for retirement and putting food on the table for their kids.”

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buckwheat

Nothing more than the NDP manifest in which Federal and Provincial have the same goal. Nationalize everything, just like China. What really cause issues is unbridled spending (you’re good at it) and control of the free markets. Oh, and you don’t have to worry about your gold plated provincial government pension now do you. In fact, you don’t need the extra bucks from the CPP. Think you should donate your cheque when you get it. We are all in this together, are we not. I want my fair share of what you make. Lol

Southern Albertan

“Under the Canada Pension Plan Act, any province needs to give three years’ notice before leaving, and prove that its pension plan would provide comparable benefits. The process has never been tested; Quebec is the only province outside the CPP, but it opted out of the plan’s inception in 1965. Alberta would need to negotiate the terms of the exit, a process that would be fraught with uncertainties.”
As it is, the return on CPP investments is more lucrative than the return on AIMCO investments. And, Alberta “would lose the larger national base of contributors.”
“Alberta exit from the Canada Pension Plan could cost more than Kenney says, experts warn.”
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