It had to happen; just as I am passing
into the demographic that seems to get a discount on almost
everything, a think tank releases a report suggesting I shouldn't.
The Institute for Research on Public
Policy spent a year pondering the economics and ethics of governments
giving seniors discounts on taxes, transit, recreation fees, library
cards . . . pretty well everything that comes with a fee.
Economist Harry Kitchen is the lead
author a report titled No Seniors Specials: Financing Municipal
Services in Aging Communities.
The report is primarily Ontario-based, and it reveals a definite
skewing of fee structures based on age in that province.
For
instance, a monthly bus pass in Toronto is $100.75, but a senior can
get such a pass for $40.75. Now that's a discount.
In Red
Deer, a Go Pass is regular $66, and $58 for a senior — a break, but
not a huge break. The city also has a link helping seniors claim a
federal GIS subsidy on that pass, effectively bringing it down to
$33. That GIS supplement is income-tested, so only the lowest-income
seniors get it all.
Kitchen's
report sparked only the briefest of news-chat interest. It doesn't
seem people want to talk about cutting subsidies for the demographic
with the highest voting percentages.
The
economist does raise some important points that people often get
wrong when they talk about our society's obligations toward our
senior citizens.
Kitchen
rightly points out that the conditions that created the need for
seniors discounts no longer exist in the same way as in the past.
Back in the 60s and 70s “poor” and “old” could almost be
considered synonymous.
Not
today. Are there low-income seniors around today? There sure are —
I'm one of them.
But
there are far more children in Red Deer living below the official
poverty line than seniors. We haven't had a Vital Signs report in Red
Deer for a few years, but the most recent one (2010) had 17 per cent
of families with children living below low-income cutoffs. That's 17
per cent of 19 per cent of total population
And
their parents pay full fare.
Seniors
represented only 9.8 of the population in 2010, and of them, less
than 10 per cent lived under low-income cutoff standards.
So
Kitchen the economist looks forward to the fast changing Canadian
demographic situation, as a tidal wave of wealthy boomers starts to
qualify for seniors discounts.
How
will cities create a stable communities when a large portion of
wealthy citizens gets services subsidized by younger families who are
just struggling to get by?
His
argument is that we can't afford to wait until we reach a funding
crisis for transit, recreation and other services in cities, based on
demographics. The longer we wait, he says, the harder it will be to
act.
My
response would be to meet him halfway on some of this. Guess what?
Rich seniors don't buy that many monthly bus passes, not at the same
rate as low-income seniors. So transit — a service of major
importance to those seniors who use it — is already pretty much
self-income-tested.
Another
argument that rankles Kitchen is the concept that seniors have
“earned” their discounts. How does one deserve a discount on
consumed services, simply because they paid for their services in the
past?
You
pay your taxes this year, for garbage pickup this year. It's not a
savings account to get you free years of garbage pickup down the
road.
Report
critics argue back, saying the seniors discounts on some recreation services
are actually a good investment. If an economic barrier is removed for
older people to get out, be active, join groups and interact with
others, that's a cheap and effective way to ward off the much higher
social costs of depression, poor diet and declining health.
I'm
going to say I'm a little insulted by this. If it's so good for
seniors, why not make it good for everyone? Why should a depressed,
lonely and low income person 40 years old have to pay full price to
join a fitness group at the Collicutt Centre at $8.50 a session, when
a senior with six figures in the bank pays $7.50?
The
discussion we need to engage is about how to build a healthy stable
community, where everyone can participate and pay their share.
Just
this week, I got a seniors discount on a haircut. When my barber
handed me my change, I thought there was some mistake. But I shoved
it in my pocket and skipped all the way home.
Not a
good start to ethical seniorhood, but I'm old, and I'm weak. That's
perhaps why municipal authorities need an early start on what is
worth an age-based discount, and what might be better off
means-tested.
I just
can't trust myself around a five-dollar bill.
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