NDP launches counter survey on potential Alberta Pension Plan | 24CA News
The Opposition NDP has launched a survey of its personal concerning the UCP’s thought for the province to tug out of the Canada Pension Plan and create an Alberta Pension Plan as a substitute.
It comes after the Government of Alberta issued an online survey concerning the thought, following the discharge of a third-party report into the potential and feasibility of Alberta leaving the CPP.
NDP finance critic Shannon Phillips informed reporters that the federal government’s survey misses one key query.
“This so-called consultation, using government resources, does not even ask if Albertans want to exit the Canada Pension Plan,” Phillips stated Monday.
The authorities’s survey as a substitute asks Albertans for suggestions on how an Alberta Pension Plan needs to be structured; utilizing highlights from the commissioned report that present a provincial pension plan would ship larger advantages payouts and financial savings by decrease contributions.
Phillips stated the province’s survey assumes help to tug out of the CPP and administer its personal pension plan.
“Instead, every question is about how Albertans want to design an Alberta Pension Plan,” she stated. “In other words, it’s just asking Albertans what colour of unicorn they would like; and the fact there will be unicorns is taken as a given by this government.”

The report, commissioned by the federal government, says Alberta could be entitled to $334 billion, or greater than half, of the CPP fund if it had been to tug out of the nationwide plan in 2027.
The report states that, primarily based on that share, Alberta would save $5 billion yearly in decrease contributions if it went by itself.

However, some economists have questioned the report’s calculations, saying the hypothetical payout is predicated on one interpretation of the underlying laws and funding system.
In an announcement to Global News, Alberta finance minister Nate Horner stated making certain Albertans have the chance to offer suggestions on the potential of an Alberta Pension Plan “is a priority for Alberta’s government.”
Horner’s assertion additionally stated an impartial panel led by former finance minister Jim Dinning will even present alternatives for Albertans to “ask their questions, raise their concerns and provide their thoughts on a potential APP.”
“We have been clear all along: Albertans will choose what happens with their pensions,” Horner’s assertion stated. “Unlike the NDP who have made it clear that they would not respect the wishes of Albertans, we will put the interest of Albertans first and respect whatever choice they make.”

That panel is anticipated to start these consultations within the coming weeks by to subsequent spring, with a suggestions report back to suggest whether or not the federal government ought to maintain a referendum on a provincial pension plan.
MRU political scientist Duane Bratt, who has accomplished the federal government’s survey, stated he believes the consultations are about altering public opinion, not gauging it.
“Jim Dinning has been appointed to a panel, not to gauge opinion, but to shape it and change it,” Bratt stated. “It’s clear that the Government of Alberta isn’t putting a thumb on the scale, they’re stomping their foot on the scale.”
According to Phillips, the NDP’s survey asks whether or not Alberta ought to ditch the CPP, and reasoning for why or why not.
© 2023 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.
