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Steve Dodd's avatar

Without considering the overall tax impact and looking at net costs, these "cherry picked" budget line items are irrelevant and misleading. OAS is taxable. Plus, RRSP's are fully taxed as single year income upon death. There is a lot more to consider here. Is it out of balance? Absolutely. Is it as bad as claimed, likely not but can't be determined until all variables are included.

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Valerie's avatar

Sometimes I feel like people see the statistic about the number of workers to retirees when boomers were young, but think it's the current situation that is abnormal demographics. The current ratio of workers to seniors is about what you would expect if all generations were the same size when they were born! On average people spend 17 years retired, and 50 years in whats (maybe too broadly) defined as working age. The average person spends about three times as long working-age as over 65, so that would be about the ratio of workers in a stable population. (They weren't the same size, but the difference was already mostly made up by immigration.)

It's true that governments didn't plan for boomers to retire. But the whole structure of our safety nets, many put in place in the 60s as boomers were reaching adulthood, was basically made possible by boomers being such a huge demographic relative to their parents and simultaneously having fewer children than their parents did (so relatively less public resources were needed for spending on children). Governments didn't plan for that to end, but it was always an unusual (or transitional) situation.

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