CPP改革方案的模拟替代率

Kevin S. Milligan, Tammy Schirle
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引用次数: 10

摘要

加拿大人口中有一部分人面临着退休准备不足的风险。这些人退休后可能没有足够的养老金收入来维持目前的生活方式。这似乎是一个需要政府采取紧急行动的问题。只是,这些人不是弱势群体或低收入者。他们是中高收入者,没有雇主提供的养老金,但大概有能力自己为退休储蓄。我们是否把其中的许多问题视为政府需要解决的问题,完全取决于我们对政府角色的看法。归根结底,这就是当前关于改革加拿大养老金计划的讨论的内容。老年人收入的趋势总体上是积极的:与20世纪70年代相比,退休人员的生活要舒适得多,收入总体上没有明显的下降迹象。数据显示,低收入的加拿大人在退休后将能够在很大程度上维持他们目前的收入,依靠加拿大养老金计划和其他公共支持。那些中等或较高收入的加拿大人,如公共服务人员,也享受雇主提供的养老金,他们也处于有利地位,能够在退休后基本上维持他们的工作年龄生活方式。与此同时,没有明显的证据表明,未来领取与就业相关养老金的工人数量将会下降;年轻工人的养老金覆盖面一直在增加,公共部门工人的比例也在增加。扩大CPP——无论是使用pei最近提出的计划,还是经济学家Michael Wolfson提出的“楔形”建议,或者仅仅是将CPP供款允许的最高养老金收入空间加倍——将对那些没有为退休储蓄足够的相对舒适的工人产生最大的影响。实际上,这将迫使他们存更多的钱。但这并非没有风险。在实际层面上,仅仅增加CPP供款就会使加拿大养老金计划投资委员会的投资决策对加拿大人的退休命运负有更大的责任。但它也传播了一种哲学,在这种哲学中,联邦政府扮演着越来越大的角色,深入到我们生活中传统上被认为是个人责任的领域。也就是说,关于退休储蓄的决定是复杂的,不可逆转的,但却至关重要。至少会有一些人做出糟糕的选择。是让相对有利的工人承担他们自己投资决定的后果,还是我们需要政府干预以扩大CPP来保护他们,这在很大程度上取决于我们对政策制定者的家长式期望。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Simulated Replacement Rates for CPP Reform Options
A certain segment of the Canadian population is at risk of being ill-prepared for retirement. These people will likely not have enough pension income when they retire to maintain their current lifestyle. It sounds like a problem that calls for urgent government action. Only, these people are not underprivileged or lowincome earners. They are middle- and higher-income earners who lack an employer-provided pension, but presumably have the capacity to save for retirement on their own. Whether we see the fact that many of them do not as a problem for government to solve depends entirely on our view of the role of government. This, ultimately, is what the current discussions about reforming the Canada Pension Plan, boil down to. The trend in the incomes of the elderly is generally positive: compared to the 1970s, retirees are living far more comfortably, with incomes overall showing no obvious signs of distress. And data show that Canadians earning low incomes will be able to largely maintain their current earnings upon retirement, relying on the Canada Pension Plan and other public supports. Those Canadians earning mid-range and higher incomes who also enjoy an employer-provided pension, such as public-service workers, are also well-positioned to be able to largely maintain their working-age lifestyles after retirement. Meanwhile, there is no obvious evidence that the number of workers with employment-related pensions will decline in the future; pension coverage among young workers has been increasing, as has the proportion of workers in the public sector. Expanding the CPP — whether it is using the plan recently proposed by P.E.I., the “wedge” proposal offered by economist Michael Wolfson, or simply doubling the maximum pensionable-earnings room allowed for CPP contributions — would have the largest impact on relatively comfortable workers who are not saving adequately for retirement. In effect, it would force them to save more. But that is not without risks. On a practical level, simply increasing CPP contributions makes the investment decisions of the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board that much more liable for the retirement fate of Canadians. But it also promulgates a philosophy in which the federal government plays an ever-larger role, moving further into parts of our lives that have traditionally been considered areas of personal responsibility. That said, decisions about retirement savings are complicated and irreversible, yet critically important. There will inevitably be at least some people who make poor choices. Whether leaving relatively advantaged workers to suffer the consequences of their own investment decisions, or whether we require government intervention to protect them with an expanded CPP, hinges very much on just how paternalistic we expect our policy-makers to be.
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