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| EST. READ TIME 1 MIN.Canada Pension Plan costs triple as investment board spending skyrockets
The Canada Pension Plan Investment Board reported its operating expenses as $490 million in fiscal 2012–13, or 0.28% of its assets, up from 0.11% six years earlier, touting this as a measure of its efficiency and low costs. However, this definition of operating expenses does not include all the costs related to the CPP. The total cost of running the CPP has grown from $0.6 billion (0.54% of assets) to $2.0 billion (1.15%) over the last seven years. Of the $2.0 billion of total costs involved in the CPP last year, almost one-third ($0.6 billion) were incurred by the federal government, a cost not explicitly included in the CPPIB accounting statements.
External management fees, which have risen from $25 million to $782 million in six years, and the transaction costs of executing the CPPIB’s investment strategy are nearly twice as large as its operating expenses. The investment strategy of the CPP now costs nearly as much as all its operating expenses, including the government’s collection of all contributions and paying of benefits.
The CPPIB needs to be more transparent about the expense of designing and implementing its investment strategy; every dollar spent on behalf of the CPP is one less dollar available to beneficiaries. As well, a full accounting of all CPP costs, including those incurred by the Government of Canada, is necessary.
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Philip Cross
Senior Fellow, Fraser InstitutePhilip Cross spent 36 years at Statistics Canada, the last few years as its Chief Economic Analyst. He wrote Statistics Canada'smonthly assessment of the economy for years, as well as many feature articles for the Canadian Economic Observer. After leaving Statistics Canada, he worked for the Macdonald-Laurier Institute. He has been widely-quoted over the years, and now writes a bi-weekly column for the National Post and other papers.… Read more Read Less… -
Joel Emes
Senior Economist, Fraser InstituteJoel Emes is a Senior Economist, Addington Centre for Measurement, at the Fraser Institute. Joel started his career with theFraser Institute and rejoined after a stint as a senior analyst, acting executive director and then senior advisor to British Columbia’s provincial government. Joel initiated and led several flagship projects in the areas of tax freedom and government performance, spending, debt, and unfunded liabilities. He supports many projects at the Institute in areas such as investment, equalization, school performance and fiscal policy. Joel holds a B.A. and an M.A. in economics from Simon Fraser University.… Read more Read Less…
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