The Canadian Pension Plan (CPP) is public program that requires all employed Canadians to contribute a percentage of their earnings, with their employer matching the amount, to a nationally administered pension plan. Currently, the employee contribution rate is set at 4.95% up to a maximum of $2,356.
@957R7NY2yrs2Y
No, but allow employees the option to opt-out of the CPP and invest in a private pension plan
@92RLCFR2yrs2Y
as long as the funds invested are distributed back to the individual on a person by person basis
@8YP7F5P2yrs2Y
No, and abolish the CPP
@8V3WNRH3yrs3Y
Raise it to 33.33% for employers, government, and people
@8TJ5HL53yrs3Y
@DewyWind3yrs3Y
No, and privatize employee contribution plans
@8DYG7BX4yrs4Y
No, and repeal the Canadian Pension Plan
@ISIDEWITH10yrs10Y
@ISIDEWITH10yrs10Y
@ISIDEWITH10yrs10Y
@ISIDEWITH10yrs10Y
@ISIDEWITH10yrs10Y
@3DXKSYT4yrs4Y
The best idea of CPP is to provide for the elderly and the infirm when they can no longer support themselves with labor. Pour some of that money into a cultural revolution advocating that the self-satisfied, selfish, practically childless, adult children of the elderly gird up their loins and take on the ultimate human responsibility of caring for their loving parents who changed their diapers and didn't throw their ungrateful carcasses under a speeding train (but probably now wish they had, you ungrateful, malformed wretches.)