Sunday, December 28, 2025
ADVT 
National

Feds Take Digital Step To Reshape Benefits System For Expat Seniors

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 26 Jul, 2019 08:21 PM
  • Feds Take Digital Step To Reshape Benefits System For Expat Seniors

OTTAWA - The federal government is moving to trade, in bulk, information on expatriate seniors with other countries to save time and money when one of them dies.

 

About three million Canadians live overseas, including seniors who qualify for federal benefits such as old-age security and the Canada Pension Plan.

 

Internal government documents prepared for Seniors Minister Filomena Tassi and obtained by The Canadian Press under access-to-information law outline the problem when one those expats receiving benefits dies overseas.

 

Simply put, details about a death have been passed on ad hoc, leading to delays in reporting and incorrect payments the government had to chase down to get back.

 

Federal officials have started exchanging digital files in bulk with the Netherlands since a two-way agreement on handling this information was signed in March.

 

Employment and Social Development Canada, which is responsible for the most of the programs involved, says it and many other foreign governments are looking to sign more such deals to improve the efficiency of public pension programs.

 

The government is able to pay pensioners abroad and give pension benefits to foreign nationals living in Canada through social-security agreements signed over decades with other countries. Canada has signed 60 such deals, including with the U.S., U.K., Japan, China and Mexico, among others.

 

These agreements let people who are eligible for benefits from both governments — because they lived and worked in both places for extended periods, for instance — get co-ordinated payments in local currency, which is usually more convenient for them.

 

In all, old-age security payments went to almost 6.3 million people in March, according to federal statistics, while almost 5.3 million received Canada Pension Plan payments.

 

The most recent actuarial report on the old-age-security program said that about 1.9 per cent of men and 1.3 per cent of women who received the seniors' benefit lived abroad in 2015. The report also expected these numbers to "slightly increase" in the coming years.

 

For years, the agreements only allowed personal information about benefits recipients to flow between governments on a case-by-case basis, and on physical paper, to determine whether an expat was entitled to public benefits. ESDC said the exchange of information generally happened when someone applied for benefits through one of the international agreements.

 

The presentation provided to Tassi in March noted that there were "no systematic processes in place" for finding out when someone dies abroad.

 

The result, officials wrote, were delays in reporting deaths that "often result in costly overpayments and prolonged collection efforts" as well as a risk the deceased's "identity and account may be compromised."

 

The situation was likely to get worse, officials said: "Considering the global patterns in migration, the movement of pensioners around the world, and the lack of systematic processes in place, it is increasingly difficult to obtain timely notification of death of a beneficiary living abroad."

 

Since 2015, ESDC has tried to solve this conundrum by signing international agreements to digitally ship information on multiple beneficiaries at one with a click of a button. The first such deal was signed with the Netherlands in March and ESDC said the first exchange of information took place in April.

 

The documents say the Netherlands was selected as the first foreign partner under the department's "death abroad data exchange" initiative because of, among other things, the number of expats in each country's jurisdiction. There are about 5,000 Canadians receiving old-age security and Canada Pension Plan payments in the Netherlands, and about 15,000 Dutch pensioners living in Canada.

 

The documents say 16 countries were identified as potential partners for the initiative, and that the "timing and volume" of negotiations for future agreements will be weighted against other departmental priorities.

MORE National ARTICLES

Canada's military spies can collect, share info on Canadians, directive says

The committee plans to deliver a special report to the prime minister on the subject this year.

Canada's military spies can collect, share info on Canadians, directive says

B.C. sounds drought alarms; fish, water, fire threats

B.C. sounds drought alarms; fish, water, fire threats
Drought levels have been raised already for parts of the province and Dave Campbell, with the B.C. River Forecast Centre, says the current forecast points to drought conditions provincewide in the coming weeks.

B.C. sounds drought alarms; fish, water, fire threats

Trudeau calls out Tory premiers for 'playing games' with national unity over C-69

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says conservative premiers are playing games with national unity by threatening the country's future if they don't get their way on an environmental-assessment bill.

Trudeau calls out Tory premiers for 'playing games' with national unity over C-69

Victoria police chief hands out hefty fine to driver who flicked lit butt

Chief Const. Del Manak said he was travelling on a highway in his unmarked police car when he noticed the driver of a Ford Mustang ahead of him toss the lit butt.

Victoria police chief hands out hefty fine to driver who flicked lit butt

Two men dead, three people in hospital after boats collide on B.C. lake

The bodies of two men have been recovered from Osoyoos Lake in British Columbia's southern Okanagan, following a high-speed collision between two power boats.

Two men dead, three people in hospital after boats collide on B.C. lake

Ottawa announces $13 million for Canada's coastal habitats on World Oceans Day

Federal Fisheries Minister Jonathan Wilkinson says the money would support an additional 24 projects under Ottawa's Coastal Restoration Fund to help restore habitats along Canada's shorelines.

Ottawa announces $13 million for Canada's coastal habitats on World Oceans Day