APP Alberta Pension Plan

snopro

Active VIP Member
Joined
Mar 3, 2009
Messages
108,453
Reaction score
104,990
Location
Milo,Alberta
I have some concerns right now. Alberta says we have a right to 53% of the fund. Ontario says they would have 55% if they were to leave. I’m no rocket scientist but if 2 provinces would be entitled to 108% of the fund then what does every other province with the exception of Quebec have a right to? 108% is impossible so the numbers are skewed. I want to see exactly what we would get before voting yes to an APP. There is much more info that needs to come out before we should have a referendum.!
 

Caper11

Active VIP Member
Joined
Oct 28, 2007
Messages
9,592
Reaction score
18,803
Location
Edson,Alberta
I have some concerns right now. Alberta says we have a right to 53% of the fund. Ontario says they would have 55% if they were to leave. I’m no rocket scientist but if 2 provinces would be entitled to 108% of the fund then what does every other province with the exception of Quebec have a right to? 108% is impossible so the numbers are skewed. I want to see exactly what we would get before voting yes to an APP. There is much more info that needs to come out before we should have a referendum.!

I think someone is dreaming a number up for Ontario.
I highly doubt the majority of the Ontario workers finish paying the CPP off in the year like Alberta does.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
 

team dirt

Active VIP Member
Joined
Oct 17, 2008
Messages
2,150
Reaction score
5,884
Location
brooks ab/seymour arm
Website
www.sledseymourarm.ca
I would like an option to just opt out if it. I contributed 3700 and change this year. I think it was July or august I paid it off. That means my employer did the same. I bet I could make that money go further if I was looking after it myself. If you are relying on this money for retirement your f’d.
 

BILTIT

Active VIP Member
Joined
Dec 20, 2010
Messages
10,046
Reaction score
20,597
Location
Lloydminster
You can opt out......when you are ready to retire. Meet ALL the requirements and you are golden.....seems kind of dictatorish to me. And here people thought they had free choice in Canada, hahahaha.

 

Teth-Air

Active VIP Member
Joined
Oct 16, 2008
Messages
3,782
Reaction score
8,071
Location
Calgary/Nelson
I have some concerns right now. Alberta says we have a right to 53% of the fund. Ontario says they would have 55% if they were to leave. I’m no rocket scientist but if 2 provinces would be entitled to 108% of the fund then what does every other province with the exception of Quebec have a right to? 108% is impossible so the numbers are skewed. I want to see exactly what we would get before voting yes to an APP. There is much more info that needs to come out before we should have a referendum.!
I believe this is how the entitlement is calulated. You know how much money your province invested and you know how much was paid out to your seniors of your province. Now you know how much that remaining investment would have made in interest in any other average average pension plan and you calculate compounded interest + investment. That number (in Albeta's case) is 53% of what is shown on the books that the CPP holds. I could be wrong but that is what I expected.
 

Caper11

Active VIP Member
Joined
Oct 28, 2007
Messages
9,592
Reaction score
18,803
Location
Edson,Alberta
All Govt controlled systems are Facked. I would rather have a higher TFSA limit or none for that matter. I would prefer to look after my own pension, and opt out like Team dirt mentioned. Rrsps are a joke IMO how the Government has that setup as well.
Look at the difference in the Quebec RRSP vs the rest of the country.
Unemployment insurance is another topic that gets me fuming, those funds should stay in the province you have a address in.

Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
 
Last edited:

deaner

Active VIP Member
Joined
Nov 6, 2008
Messages
3,232
Reaction score
11,236
Location
Creston, BC
I would like an option to just opt out if it. I contributed 3700 and change this year. I think it was July or august I paid it off. That means my employer did the same. I bet I could make that money go further if I was looking after it myself. If you are relying on this money for retirement your f’d.
Couldn't agree more
 

deaner

Active VIP Member
Joined
Nov 6, 2008
Messages
3,232
Reaction score
11,236
Location
Creston, BC
and if u never pay into the UI should get a kick back when u retire
I've always said it should be administered like a true insurance. For guys like myself, and I'm guessing a ton of you, I will never use it. I have this crazy system where I think ahead and plan for a rainy day. People like this should pay no, or very small premiums. Frick....some people use it every single year. We shouldn't be subsidizing that
 

acesup800

Active VIP Member
Joined
Nov 29, 2008
Messages
1,455
Reaction score
2,649
Location
BC
I believe this is how the entitlement is calulated. You know how much money your province invested and you know how much was paid out to your seniors of your province. Now you know how much that remaining investment would have made in interest in any other average average pension plan and you calculate compounded interest + investment. That number (in Albeta's case) is 53% of what is shown on the books that the CPP holds. I could be wrong but that is what I expected.
So, a bunch of young guys pay a bunch of CPP in Alberta for 20 years and then retire in BC and then BC has to pay out the CPP. How exactly does that math work? Sure it looks like Alberta contributes more than it pays out if that is the case. That can't be how it is calculated because very few move to Alberta to retire, but a lot leave. I know dozens of retires on the island from Sask/Alberta living the ocean life.
 

bobsledder

Active VIP Member
Joined
Jan 11, 2009
Messages
2,826
Reaction score
6,120
Location
Not Sure
So, a bunch of young guys pay a bunch of CPP in Alberta for 20 years and then retire in BC and then BC has to pay out the CPP. How exactly does that math work? Sure it looks like Alberta contributes more than it pays out if that is the case. That can't be how it is calculated because very few move to Alberta to retire, but a lot leave. I know dozens of retires on the island from Sask/Alberta living the ocean life.
They collect from the plan they contributed to. For example if you live in Quebec and contribute to the QPP all your life when you retire you collect from it even when you move to Bring Cash or anywhere else you choose to go in the world.
 

LUCKY 7

Active VIP Member
Joined
Jan 17, 2009
Messages
7,067
Reaction score
10,729
Location
Sparwood
I've always said it should be administered like a true insurance. For guys like myself, and I'm guessing a ton of you, I will never use it. I have this crazy system where I think ahead and plan for a rainy day. People like this should pay no, or very small premiums. Frick....some people use it every single year. We shouldn't be subsidizing that
My wife's cousin barely worked in his life but some how got EI most years and now due to his life style is on a disablilty pay. He made a point to brag about how he screws the system constantly. Since we pay into the system he was actually screwing us...
 

MP Kid

Active VIP Member
Joined
Dec 20, 2010
Messages
3,084
Reaction score
4,301
Location
East of Calgary
The bigger issue here that nobody seems to be willing to discuss, is what makes you think that all the monies collected in the name of “CPP” actually made it into the fund…!!!!

That would make sense as to why every province’s claim of the percentage they have doesn’t add up to the total currently in the CPP.

Governments of the day probably use it like their daily “slush” fund….
 

Teth-Air

Active VIP Member
Joined
Oct 16, 2008
Messages
3,782
Reaction score
8,071
Location
Calgary/Nelson
I believe this is how the entitlement is calulated. You know how much money your province invested and you know how much was paid out to your seniors of your province. Now you know how much that remaining investment would have made in interest in any other average average pension plan and you calculate compounded interest + investment. That number (in Albeta's case) is 53% of what is shown on the books that the CPP holds. I could be wrong but that is what I expected.

So, a bunch of young guys pay a bunch of CPP in Alberta for 20 years and then retire in BC and then BC has to pay out the CPP. How exactly does that math work? Sure it looks like Alberta contributes more than it pays out if that is the case. That can't be how it is calculated because very few move to Alberta to retire, but a lot leave. I know dozens of retires on the island from Sask/Alberta living the ocean life.
That is one way the numbers get skewed. Another is a province that takes out more than they put in. And also bad management of the fund whereit actually can lose money on the investments.
 
Last edited:

carguy

Active VIP Member
Joined
Dec 31, 2007
Messages
173
Reaction score
161
Location
Calgary
"The primary source of Alberta’s gain would be a $334-billion asset transfer when the APP takes over CPP liabilities owing to Albertans. Under current CPP rules for a province’s withdrawal, Alberta would be entitled to a net transfer calculated on the assumption it had never joined the CPP, which began in 1966. That amount would equal its past CPP contributions, net of benefits paid to Albertans and administrative costs, plus associated investment returns. Lifeworks figures the total asset transfer due is about half of CPP’s current net assets."

.....taken from article: Jack Mintz: An Alberta Pension Plan would be entitled to half of CPP assets — a no brainer

Link: https://www.msn.com/en-ca/money/top...p&cvid=5de5d910a1cf4371b15ff81d8aafa06a&ei=10
 

catalac

Active VIP Member
Joined
Nov 22, 2008
Messages
3,424
Reaction score
13,076
Location
Red Deer
Quebec pension plan gov and media all good…
Alberta proposed pension plan gov and media freaking out…

As much as I’m ok with it, if smith puts its to a referendum I doubt it passes.
 
Top Bottom