Ontario pension policy making and the politics of CPP reform, 1963–2016
Digital Document
Collection(s) |
Collection(s)
|
---|---|
Content type |
Content type
|
Resource Type |
Resource Type
|
Genre |
Genre
|
Language |
Language
|
Peer Review Status |
Peer Review Status
Peer Reviewed
|
Persons |
Author (aut): Christensen, Benjamin B.
|
---|
Origin Information |
|
---|
Abstract |
Abstract
After years of pension policy drift in a broader context of global austerity, the Canada Pension Plan (CPP) was enhanced for the first time in 2016 to expand benefits for Canadian workers. This article examines Ontario's central role in these reforms. The deteriorating condition of workplace plans, coupled with rising retirement income insecurity across the province's labour force, generated new sources of negative feedback at the provincial level, fuelling Ontario's campaign for CPP reform beginning in the late 2000s. The political limits of policy drift and layering at the provincial level is considered in relationship to policy making at the national level. As shown, a new period of pension politics emerged in Canada after 2009, in which the historical legacy of CPP's joint governance structure led to a dynamic of "collusive benchmarking," shaped in large part by political efforts of the Ontario government, leading to CPP enhancement. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
|
---|
Publication Title |
Publication Title
|
---|---|
Publication Number |
Publication Number
Volume 53, Issue 1
|
DOI |
DOI
10.1017/S0008423919000805
|
---|---|
ISSN |
ISSN
0008-4239
|
Note |
|
---|
URL | |
---|---|
Identifier URI | |
Use and Reproduction |
Use and Reproduction
©2020. Canadian Political Science Association.
|
Rights Statement |
Rights Statement
|