Close X
Friday, September 20, 2024
ADVT 
National

Canadians Reasonably Well-prepared For Retirement, C.D. Howe Report Says

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 04 Jun, 2015 11:47 AM
    OTTAWA — Canadians are saving enough and are reasonably well-prepared for life after work, said a report Thursday by the C.D. Howe Institute, which challenges some of the common assumptions about retirement planning.
     
    The report by author Malcolm Hamilton suggests most save more than the five per cent household savings rate and most can retire comfortably on less than the traditional 70 per cent of pre-retirement income target.
     
    "The greatest challenges come early in their adult lives when the burdens of acquiring a home and supporting young children strain the family budget," Hamilton wrote in the report.
     
    "After that, things get easier."
     
    Among the common assumptions about retirement questioned in the report by Hamilton is the need for 70 per cent of your pre-retirement income to maintain your lifestyle.
     
    "The traditional 70 per cent target is reasonable for young families who want to sacrifice heavily for 20 years so they can enjoy, after retirement, the high standard of living they can expect near the end of their working lives," he said. 
     
    "It is also reasonable for those who never have children or buy a home. But for most Canadians the 70 per cent target significantly overestimates both the income they need when they retire and the amount they must save to get there."
     
    He suggested the low household savings rate is due to a reduction in saving unrelated to retirement, an increase in withdrawals from pension plans and RRSPs, and a reduction in the rate of return on retirement savings.
     
    Hamilton also challenged the worries about declining RRSP contributions and the billions in unused contribution room as an indicator that Canadians aren't saving for retirement. He suggested that combined with tax-free savings account contributions, that may not be the case.
     
    Politicians have raised concerns that Canadians aren't saving enough for retirement.
     
    Ontario has passed legislation to create its own provincial pension plan, while the federal government has said it will hold consultations regarding a possible voluntary expansion of the Canada Pension Plan.
     
    However, Hamilton says the Canada and Quebec Pension Plans can only go so far in helping.
     
    "They can establish a lowest common denominator — a replacement target that all Canadians should strive to equal or exceed," Hamilton wrote.
     
    "Beyond that, we need better targeted programs — programs that are better able to recognize and address our individual needs."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. Renews Billion-Dollar Peace River Resource Sharing Deal Ending In 2035

    VICTORIA — Premier Christy Clark has announced a renewed 20-year billion-dollar Peace River Agreement with resource-rich communities in British Columbia's northeast.

    B.C. Renews Billion-Dollar Peace River Resource Sharing Deal Ending In 2035

    Missing Hiker Emerges From Forest During Search In Maple Ridge

    Missing Hiker Emerges From Forest During Search In Maple Ridge
    MAPLE RIDGE, B.C. — Mounties say an overdue hiker has been found in Maple Ridge, B.C., but not by search crews — the man walked out of the forest on his own.

    Missing Hiker Emerges From Forest During Search In Maple Ridge

    Dog Soothes 10-Year-Old Girl At Sex-Assault Trial; Sets New Course For B.C.'s Courts

    Dog Soothes 10-Year-Old Girl At Sex-Assault Trial; Sets New Course For B.C.'s Courts
    VANCOUVER — A police dog has helped a 10-year-old girl endure the pain of testifying about an alleged sexual assault, and in doing so has become the first canine to assist a child during a trial in British Columbia.

    Dog Soothes 10-Year-Old Girl At Sex-Assault Trial; Sets New Course For B.C.'s Courts

    Saskatchewan Professor Ravi Chibbar Debunks Claims That Modern Wheat Causing Gluten Intolerance

    Saskatchewan Professor Ravi Chibbar Debunks Claims That Modern Wheat Causing Gluten Intolerance
    A University of Saskatchewan professor Ravi Chibbar says he's debunked claims that modern varieties of wheat are causing gluten intolerance because of how their protein content has been manipulated

    Saskatchewan Professor Ravi Chibbar Debunks Claims That Modern Wheat Causing Gluten Intolerance

    How Old Are Those Fish? Creationist Finds Fossils While Digging Calgary Basement

    How Old Are Those Fish? Creationist Finds Fossils While Digging Calgary Basement
    CALGARY — Edgar Nernberg sees the irony of believing the Earth is roughly 6,000 years old, while being the one to discover rare fossils of fish that scientists estimate lived 60 million years ago.

    How Old Are Those Fish? Creationist Finds Fossils While Digging Calgary Basement

    Calgary's Worst Mass Murder Accused Matthew de Grood To Go To Trial Next May

    Calgary's Worst Mass Murder Accused Matthew de Grood To Go To Trial Next May
    Matthew de Grood was charged with first-degree murder after an attack at an end-of-school house party in April 2014 in which five young people were stabbed to death.

    Calgary's Worst Mass Murder Accused Matthew de Grood To Go To Trial Next May