Monday, March 30, 2026

A Fairer, More Sustainable Benefits System


Targeted Support for Low-Income Seniors and Working Canadians 

Canada can afford to help those in need — but it cannot afford to help everyone forever.


Canada’s public benefits system has expanded dramatically over the past two decades, contributing to persistent deficits and rising public debt across both federal and provincial governments. These programs provide valuable support — but too often benefits flow to households that are financially secure, while many low-income seniors and working Canadians continue to struggle with the rising cost of housing, groceries, and daily living.

A smarter, more consistent approach is long overdue — one that focuses help where it is genuinely required, encourages work and self-reliance where possible, and puts government spending on a sustainable long-term path.

Public support should be based on current income, not assumptions about age, status, or past eligibility.

A Practical, Income-Only Reform

The proposal is straightforward and relies solely on current annual income — with no asset test, respecting generational wealth, inheritances, or home equity.

Full benefits

  • Individuals with annual income from $0 to $30,000
  • Couples and families with income from $0 to $60,000

This raises the current very low Guaranteed Income Supplement threshold (around $22,500 for singles) to a more realistic level given today’s living costs.

Gentle taper

  • From $30,001 to $200,000
  • Benefits reduced by 12 cents per additional dollar of income

This slow reduction protects lower-middle income Canadians so modest earnings or part-time work do not immediately reduce support dramatically.

Steeper taper

  • From $200,001 to $400,000
  • Reduction rate gradually increases to approximately 45 cents per additional dollar

Hard cutoff

  • Above $400,000 annual income
  • Zero benefits from the income-tested portion

This same clear structure would apply across all major income-supported benefits, not just retirement programs.

It would cover:

  • Senior benefits (Old Age Security and Guaranteed Income Supplement)
  • Working-age supports (Employment Insurance top-ups, provincial social assistance, disability benefits)
  • Family and child benefits

The reform would be phased in gradually over a maximum of three to seven years — ideally five years. This transition period gives current recipients reasonable time to adjust while ensuring the changes are implemented before frequent government turnover can reverse them.

Benefits for People

This design prioritizes real need.

Low-income seniors

  • Receive stronger, more reliable support through a higher full-benefit floor
  • Gain greater dignity and financial security
  • Are less likely to feel forced to remain in the workforce purely out of necessity

Low-income working Canadians

  • Receive more consistent support during difficult periods
  • Face fewer penalties for taking part-time work or increasing hours
  • Maintain stronger incentives to remain economically active

Overall, the system becomes fairer and more effective: public help is concentrated on lower and lower-middle income households rather than diluted across higher earners.

Broader measures of hardship — such as material deprivation — suggest that up to one in five Canadians aged 50 and older face poverty-level living standards, even though official poverty statistics for seniors may appear lower. Raising the support floor while tapering benefits gradually addresses this reality more effectively.

Benefits for Taxpayers and Governments

By applying disciplined, income-based rules to both senior and working-age programs, this reform significantly improves targeting and reduces unnecessary spending.

Senior benefits alone — including Old Age Security and the Guaranteed Income Supplement — are projected to cost:

  • $88.8 billion in 2026–27
  • More than $100 billion by 2029–30
  • Approximately $136 billion by 2035

These rising costs reflect Canada’s aging population and increasing life expectancy. Without reform, the burden on taxpayers and future generations will continue to grow.

While the proposal adds modest cost at the very bottom to better protect low-income seniors and workers, the earlier start to reductions and the progressive taper for higher earners would generate significantly larger savings.

Expected fiscal impact

  • Annual net savings: $10–20 billion
  • Ten-year cumulative savings: $100–200 billion

These savings would help:

  • Reduce deficit growth
  • Lower interest costs on public debt
  • Ease long-term tax pressure on working families
  • Preserve the sustainability of essential public programs

What This Reform Does — and Does Not Do

This proposal does not eliminate support for seniors or working Canadians.

It does not reduce benefits for low-income households.

It does not penalize savings, home ownership, or family inheritances.

Instead, it ensures that public support is concentrated where financial need is real — and gradually reduced where it is not.

That is not austerity.

That is responsible stewardship.

A Real-World Canadian Precedent

Canada already uses income-based targeting successfully in several major programs.

Examples include:

  • Guaranteed Income Supplement
  • Canada Child Benefit
  • Old Age Security recovery tax

These programs demonstrate that income-tested benefits are:

  • Administratively feasible
  • Politically sustainable
  • Publicly accepted

This proposal simply applies the same proven principle consistently across the broader benefits system.

Intergenerational Fairness

This reform also promotes fairness between generations.

Reducing the financial pressure on low-income seniors to remain in the workforce out of necessity can help ease competition for entry-level and part-time jobs. This allows younger Canadians to gain experience, build skills, and establish financial independence earlier in life.

A responsible benefits system must serve both current and future citizens.

Why This Reform Makes Sense

After two decades of expanding public benefits that have strained budgets across Canada and many other advanced economies, governments must adopt policies that are both compassionate and financially responsible.

This income-only, tiered model delivers that balance.

It:

  • Strengthens support exactly where it is most needed
  • Gradually phases out subsidies for those who can clearly manage without public assistance
  • Avoids sudden benefit cliffs or perceptions of unfairness
  • Remains simple to administer using existing tax data

Recent polling indicates strong public support — roughly 73 percent — for reducing benefits for higher-income seniors and redirecting resources to those in greater need.

Conclusion

This reform is not about cutting benefits for vulnerable people.

It is about building a fairer and more sustainable system that truly helps low-income seniors enjoy a dignified retirement and provides working Canadians with reliable support when they need it — while protecting taxpayers from unsustainable debt.

A sustainable society is not built on promises alone — it is built on responsibility.

When governments target support wisely, protect taxpayers honestly, and focus help where it is truly needed, they strengthen both compassion and confidence in public institutions.

A fair benefits system is not about spending more.

It is about spending smarter — so dignity, independence, and opportunity remain within reach for every generation.