La Cible

Mai 2022

La Cible, magazine officiel de l’IQPF, est destinée aux planificateurs financiers et leur permet d’obtenir des unités de formation continue (UFC). Chaque numéro aborde une étude de cas touchant les différents domaines de la planification financière.

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35 FEATURE ARTICLE The second graph shows the disbursement of assets assuming that Claude decides to defer government benefits as long as possible, to age 70 for both plans. In this scenario, we can see that the RRSP/RRIF assets will be exhausted by age 75. This means it will be possible to maintain a gross income, indexed annually at 2%, of $33,000 for the entire period projected. Notice that the deferral allows Claude to maintain additional indexed gross income of nearly $4,800, an increase of 17%, which is significant. Can deferring government benefits offer a remedy for rising inflation? Is deferring government pensions a remedy – or partial remedy – for rising inflation? Let's look at Claude's data again with two little differences: we'll use an inflation rate that is 1% higher, 3% instead of 2%. At the same time, we will put the annual growth in MPE and the maximum QPP pension at 4% (1% higher than inflation). Using the same RRSP balances and government pensions, here are the two scenarios. The third graph shows the disbursement of assets assuming that Claude decides to claim government benefits as soon as possible. The RRSP/RRIF assets will allow Claude to maintain a gross income, indexed annually at 3%, of $26,700 for the entire period projected. The last graph shows the disbursement of assets assuming that Claude decides to defer government benefits as long as possible. In this scenario, we can see that the RRSP/RRIF assets will be exhausted by age 75. This means it will be possible to maintain a gross income, indexed annually at 3%, of $32,500 for the entire period projected. We can see immediately that deferring the benefits still allows Claude to maintain a higher indexed income, but we can also see that in the scenarios where the benefits are claimed as early as possible, an increase in inflation erodes the indexed gross income by over 5% ($26,700 compared to $28,200). In the scenarios where the benefits are deferred as long as possible, an increase in inflation erodes the indexed gross income by less than 2% ($32,500 compared to $33,000). Conclusion For normal life expectancy and where there are other sources of income (RRSPs, for example), deferring government benefits clearly provides a partial remedy against possible increases in inflation.

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