newswire.ca

OCT 3: BEST FROM THE BLOGOSPHERE

October 3, 2022

Canada no longer a top 10 country for retirement security: Natixis survey

A “decline in financial well-being and happiness” is cited among the reasons why Canada is no longer a top 10 nation in retirement security.

Writing in the Financial Post, Victoria Wells reports Canada has dropped to 15th place (from 10th place last year) on the Natixis Investment Managers ranking of the countries that offer the highest level of retirement security.

“The main reasons for the drop, Natixis IM said, are a decline in financial well-being and happiness, increased tax burdens, a rapidly aging population and environmental factors, such as a lack of biodiversity,” Wells reports.

She further notes that this dip in retirement security levels coincides with “soaring inflation, aggressive interest rate hikes and a wobbly stock market,” all factors making 2022 “one of the worst years ever to retire.”

In the article, Dave Goodsell of Natixis notes that the study found 65 per cent of Canadians surveyed are “underestimating their life expectancy,” and “61 per cent haven’t considered how much inflation will impact their finances.” A further 60 per cent, he states in the article, “aren’t planning for additional healthcare costs” as they age.

Another problem for the retirement system, the article reports, is the strain on the Canada Pension Plan (CPP) system as “the number of seniors boom in relation to younger workers who pay into CPP.”

“Investment strategies, financial planning, employee benefits and policy considerations will all need to factor in a new funding equation that accounts for inflation, interest rates and increased longevity,” Goodsell states in the article.

The top three countries for retirement security are Norway, Switzerland, and Iceland, the article concludes.

Another factor not noted in this article is the huge increase in retirements in this country. The Peterborough Examiner reports that retirements are up 50 per cent in Canada versus last year. The Examiner cites Statistics Canada data from August that showed 307,000 Canucks had retired in the last 12 months, versus 233,000 a year earlier.

As well, the Examiner article reports, 12.9 per cent of Canadians say they are planning to leave their jobs for retirement soon – that figure again is from August of this year.

So, summing it up, a record number of Canucks are heading out of the workplace for the last time, despite the fact that markets are unstable, inflation is at decades-high levels, and interest rates are soaring – the latter bit of news being good for savers but bad for debtors.

It’s worth noting that the CPP has a massive contingency fund, run by CPP Investments, that currently has $523 billion in assets according to a recent news release. So if we ever do get to a point where the contributions to CPP made by workers aren’t enough to pay CPP pensions, there’s a large keg of money that can be tapped at that time.

However, it’s best to have multiple streams of retirement income to rely on in the future. If you have a workplace pension you are ahead in that game. If you don’t, or want to augment your overall savings, a helpful tool is the Saskatchewan Pension Plan, a defined contribution plan that’s open to any Canadian with registered retirement savings room. Contributions you make to SPP are pooled, invested professionally at a low cost, and are grown prudently until you are ready to convert savings to retirement income. Check out SPP today!

Join the Wealthcare Revolution – follow SPP on Facebook!

Written by Martin Biefer

Martin Biefer is Senior Pension Writer at Avery & Kerr Communications in Nepean, Ontario. A veteran reporter, editor and pension communicator, he’s now a freelancer. Interests include golf, line dancing and classic rock, and playing guitar. Got a story idea? Let Martin know via LinkedIn.


As offices gear up for re-opening, will everyone want to return?

July 22, 2021

The summer of 2021 has seen the start of what looks like a return to normal. COVID numbers are down, vaccination rates are up, the economy is re-opening (carefully) and there’s talk again of travel, and of going back to the office.

Yet there’s also talk from some of NOT going back to the office? What gives? Save with SPP had a look around to explore this issue.

Research from Robert Half, an HR consulting firm, from April found that about one-in-three office workers “would quit their job rather than return to the office,” reports Western Investor.

More than half of those surveyed on the idea of returning to work said they “prefer a hybrid work arrangement, where they can divide time between the office and another location,” the article notes. Some of those surveyed did express concern that working from home has its downsides, such as the “loss of relationships with co-workers” and “fewer career opportunities and decreased productivity.”

Those who do imagine coming back want some perks, the article says, such as “greater freedom to set office hours, employer-paid commuting costs, a relaxed dress code and providing childcare.”

Ouch. What would the “dress for success” workaholics of the ‘80s make of this office aversion?

The numbers are similar south of the border. An article in Commercial Observer says that while 62 per cent of Manhattan workers were expected to return to the office, that leaves “one in three” who don’t plan to come back.

Only about 12 per cent of Manhattan’s 1.5 million office workers had returned to work by early summer and “39 per cent of people would be willing to quit their job rather than give up remote work,” the article says.

A more recent survey from Canada Life sheds some light on the concerns people have about re-entering office life.

Even given the dropping COVID numbers and higher vaccination rates, “46 per cent of Canadians working from home are anxious about the threat of the virus if and when they return to the office,” Canada Life reports in a media release.

Mary Ann Baynton of Workplace Strategies for Mental Health, who partnered on the research with Canada Life, explains this reluctance.

“For those working from home, this transition presents new and unique concerns, because they’ve been more isolated and have been able to limit their exposure to the virus for a long time. Employers need to understand what their teams are concerned about so they can effectively support them during this significant adjustment,” she states in the release.

COVID risk was by far the biggest concern identified in the research, the release notes – only 10 per cent were concerned about changes to their work-life balance, nine per cent about increased commuting, and less than one per cent about impacts to children and their care, the release notes.

From our informal research amongst friends and colleagues who have been working at home, there is certainly interest in having the flexibility to work from home – at least some of the time – going forward. If you’ve ever been crammed onto a train or subway car packed with commuters, or stuck in a 10-km long traffic jam each workday, or circling some lot in a fruitless quest for the last parking spot, it’s hard to look forward to starting all that up again. Only time will tell how it all plays out.

One thing that works as well at home as it does in the workplace is the Saskatchewan Pension Plan. You can sign up as an individual, effectively creating a tailored, end-to-end pension plan for yourself that looks after not only investing your savings, but converting them to income later on. If you’re an employer, you can offer SPP at your workplace, creating a great way to attract new team members and hanging on to the people you’ve got! Why not check out SPP today!

Join the Wealthcare Revolution – follow SPP on Facebook!

Written by Martin Biefer

Martin Biefer is Senior Pension Writer at Avery & Kerr Communications in Nepean, Ontario. A veteran reporter, editor and pension communicator, he’s now a freelancer. Interests include golf, line dancing and classic rock, and playing guitar. Got a story idea? Let Martin know via LinkedIn.