How it should work. The federal public-service pension plan has long been coordinated with CPP – or QPP if in Quebec – so that public servants earn retirement income of about two per cent of their best five-year salary for each year worked up to 35 years.
CPP makes up a small portion of the total retirement income for most public servants. The bulk comes from the public-service pension plan.
How it happened. In 2019, the government began enhancing CPP and the QPP to boost retirement incomes for all Canadians. Unions strongly backed the move. Workers and employers paid more into it, benefits went up, and the changes were phased in through 2025. All Canadian workers get the enhancements they pay for.
But somehow nobody adjusted the federal pension formula to account for any of that. The plans ended up stacked on top of each other. The PBO asked the Office of the Chief Actuary to run the numbers on the impact of the misalignment.
Just … forgot. “Somebody forgot to adjust the public-service pension plan,” Parliamentary Budget Officer Yves Giroux said when he delivered his report.
THE BOOST
The pension that grew
To illustrate the impact of the misalignment, take a very hypothetical example of someone entitled to a $100,000 pension.
Before the CPP enhancements, this retiree might have received $14,000 from CPP and $86,000 from the pension plan. With the CPP changes, the balance should have shifted: $17,000 from CPP and $83,000 from the pension plan — keeping the total at $100,000.
The CPP shifted to $17,000 as planned. But the pension plan continued to pay $86,000, which pushed the total to $103,000. Retirees effectively got a boost they weren’t supposed to get.
In real life, the size of the boost depends on various factors, such as salary and contribution history. It’s a very minimal boost at the moment. But it would grow over time as more people contribute to the enhanced CPP, said Giroux.
After finding the glitch, the PBO suggested Parliament would probably have to pass legislation to return the plans to the way they were designed to work together, with public servants earning no more than the two per cent per year they are entitled to.
Fixing the misalignment would save real money.
More than 410,000 public servants are active members in the plan. The federal budget estimates pension contributions will drop by up to $1,100 per employee a year. The government matches those contributions, so it could save up to $1.1 billion over four years beginning in 2026-27. After that, savings would settle in at $384 million annually.
The savings will help reduce the deficit, though they are separate from the government’s current spending reductions and downsizing of the public service.
Two options. Treasury Board Secretariat sent the issue to the public-service pension advisory committee for consultations and a recommended plan of action. TBS has proposed two options, neither of which is going over well with unions.
The committee has 13 members — six representing unions, six representing the employer, and one representing retirees. Sources say the government wants the committee to deliver its recommendation to Treasury Board president Shafqat Ali by early May.
The advisory committee is reportedly looking at two options:
- Apply the existing rule that public servants can’t earn more than two per cent per year.
- Adopt a flat-rate formula — a straight percentage that doesn’t adjust at age 65 based on what CPP pays. It would eliminate the integration formula that coordinates the plans and with it the bridge benefit paid to retirees until CPP kicks in. That means lower pension income before 65, but once CPP starts, retirees collect both in full. They get less early, more later. Some other large pension plans have moved in this direction.
The talks will be rocky. Unions are quite happy with the misalignment and the resulting boost for their members. PSAC is firmly in the keep-things-as-they-are camp. CUPE waded in months ago.
Both argue workers paid extra into CPP expecting a richer retirement — and now the pension side is being trimmed to wipe out those gains. They say the two options amount to the same thing: a “hidden pension cut” that would reduce pension value and a clawback of CPP gains that workers and their employers paid for.
Keep in mind that the committee just offers advice. The Treasury Board president has the final say.
The PBO report shows how the costs are growing: