Tuesday, June 23, 2026
ADVT 
National

Retiree Spending Drops Off After 70, So No Need To Index Pensions: Study

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 16 Jun, 2016 12:55 PM
    OTTAWA — A new study says automatically raising workplace pension contributions in tandem with the cost of living is unnecessary because Canadian retirees increasingly tighten their purse strings after they reach 70 years old.
     
    The report by the C.D. Howe Institute think tank also argues that tying up the extra funds in pension contributions is an inefficient use of scarce financial resources for Canadians.
     
    The research says lowering pension contributions for company plans — such as defined-benefit vehicles — would put more money in the pockets of families that are raising kids and paying down mortgages.
     
    The study is released a few days before federal Finance Minister Bill Morneau is scheduled to meet his provincial and territorial counterparts to continue quickly evolving discussions on how to boost the Canada Pension Plan.
     
    The federal Liberals have pledged to work with the provinces and territories to enhance CPP. They argue that expanding CPP across the country will ensure more Canadians have a secure retirement.
     
    The C.D.Howe paper's recommendations are mainly targeted at private pension plans — not the CPP.
     
    Study author Frederick Vettese writes that CPP contributions should not be subject to any contribution reductions since the public plan is designed to cover basic needs like food and shelter for middle-income workers after they retire.
     
    "Retirees in Canada and other developed countries demonstrate a strong tendency to reduce their out-of-pocket spending in real terms starting at around age 70 and accelerating at later ages," wrote Vettese, chief actuary for the Morneau Shepell human resources firm, which was founded by Morneau's father.
     
    "This decline can hardly be attributed to insufficient financial resources because older retirees save more on average than people who are still working."
     
    Given this, Vettese added that indexing pension contributions to the cost of living could be reeled back without sacrificing consumption later in life.
     
    The study pointed to a 2011 research paper that found the average Canadian household headed by someone aged 77 spent 40 per cent less than one headed by someone who was 54.
     
    A U.S. study, also cited by the C.D. Howe report, said that between the ages of 60 and 80 Americans spent at least 50 per cent less on purchases such as cigarettes, airline tickets and camping equipment. The same study found that between the same ages people spent at least 50 per cent more on items such as hearing aids, prescription drugs and funeral services.
     
    Until the election last fall, Bill Morneau was executive chairman of the company, which describes itself as Canada's largest provider of pension-administration technology and services.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Jian Ghomeshi Acquitted On All Charges Of Sexual Assault And Choking

    Jian Ghomeshi Acquitted On All Charges Of Sexual Assault And Choking
    Ontario court Judge William Horkins said he simply could not rely on the three complainants given their changing and shifting memories and evidence that at times strayed into outright lies.

    Jian Ghomeshi Acquitted On All Charges Of Sexual Assault And Choking

    Coffee-Tossing Toronto Woman Seen In Viral Timmies Tantrum Video Gets Police Warning

    Coffee-Tossing Toronto Woman Seen In Viral Timmies Tantrum Video Gets Police Warning
    Videographer, Ryan Favro, had declined to press a criminal complaint but officers still paid a visit to the woman

    Coffee-Tossing Toronto Woman Seen In Viral Timmies Tantrum Video Gets Police Warning

    Liberals' Maiden 'Sunny Ways' Budget Showers Spending, Deficits To Spur Growth

    Liberals' Maiden 'Sunny Ways' Budget Showers Spending, Deficits To Spur Growth
    The new Liberal government delivered a sunny ways budget Tuesday brimming with optimism and billion-dollar spending increases spread across a wide spectrum of society.

    Liberals' Maiden 'Sunny Ways' Budget Showers Spending, Deficits To Spur Growth

    Toronto Liberal MP Arnold Chan Faces Second Battle In Two Years With Rare Cancer

    The MP for Scarborough-Agincourt says a recent routine check-up revealed that his cancer has returned.

    Toronto Liberal MP Arnold Chan Faces Second Battle In Two Years With Rare Cancer

    Animal Rights Group Urges Victoria Council To Ban Horse-drawn Carriages

    Animal Rights Group Urges Victoria Council To Ban Horse-drawn Carriages
    Jordan Reichert, of the Victoria Horse Alliance, says the group will present its case to Victoria city council on Thursday.

    Animal Rights Group Urges Victoria Council To Ban Horse-drawn Carriages

    5 Killed After Van Hits Truck, Veers Off Road And Bursts Into Flames In Newfoundland

    5 Killed After Van Hits Truck, Veers Off Road And Bursts Into Flames In Newfoundland
    RCMP in Whitbourne today confirmed the number of deaths in the accident near the Long Harbour overpass at about 6 a.m. Tuesday.

    5 Killed After Van Hits Truck, Veers Off Road And Bursts Into Flames In Newfoundland