One of the more disturbing things going on in Ottawa currently is the plight of 
Nortel retirees.  About 4,000 of them were up on Parliament Hill yesterday 
trying to get the federal government to do something about their lost pensions. 
 

If I understand matters correctly, the pensions are being affected by two 
things.  One is that Nortel is currently undergoing bankruptcy proceedings and 
in such proceedings the obligations of a company to its employees typically 
gets shoved to the back of the line. Other creditors come first. The other is 
that the Nortel pension plan consists of a seperately admnistered investment 
fund into which both the employers and the employees paid regular sums of 
money.  This fund was hit hard in the recent economic downturn, so much so that 
Nortel is in a position to pay its retirees only about 60 percent of what it 
owes them.  An ex-employee who was supposed to get, say, $50,000 a year after 
thirty years of work will only get about $30,000.  Many others will probably 
get a lot less.  There isn't much that Nortel can do about it because it's 
bankrupt, broke and being sold off piece by piece.

The Globe & Mail is currently running a series on the state of pensions in 
Canada now.  One of the articles in the series contained the following 
statistics:

  a.. 17.6 million: Number of people in the Canadian work force. 
  b.. 11 million: Number of Canadian workers without pension plans. 
  c.. 4 million: Number of those workers with registered retirement savings 
plans. 
  d.. 10,000: Number of pension plans in Canada. 
  e.. 4.5 million: Workers with pension plans who have defined benefit plans 
that guarantee the pension income of retirees until they die. 
  f.. 55 per cent: Amount of those plans held by public sector employees. 
  g.. $25,000: Average pension per year. 
  (Source: Infometrica, University of Toronto professor Keith Ambachtsheer) 

Pension plans are of two general types.  In Defined Contribution plans, the 
employer contributes but the employee must decide how the contribution plus 
part of his or her own income is invested.  In Defined Benefits plans, the 
employer establishes an investment fund to which it and the employee 
contribute.  The Nortel plan was of this type.

Another G&M article - which I can't find right now - contained a chart which 
showed a substantial decline in the percentage of working Canadian with pension 
plans over the past thirty or so years.

What the G&M series suggests is a general weakening of the means by which 
workers will be able to look after themselves when they retire.  >From the 
numbers above, most do not have pension plans of any kind.  What is 
particularly worrying in this regard is that the population is aging, meaning a 
growing number of people unable to support themselves because of an inadequate 
income.  They will have income from the CPP and OAS, but even with these 
incomes will still be at the poverty level.  Many will have to work, or try to, 
into old age.

What is also worrying is a change in the way in which workers are treated.  An 
increasing proportion of those employed are now "associates" and not emplyees, 
meaning that they don't have access to many of the benefits workers 
traditionally had, including pension funds.

I'm not sure of where all of this is taking us, but it does suggest that we are 
moving into a less secure future -- perhaps far less secure.

Ed




_______________________________________________
Futurework mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.uwaterloo.ca/mailman/listinfo/futurework

Reply via email to