Keeping retirement age at 65: PM shares some budget plans with New York audience
NEW YORK — Next week’s federal budget will restore the eligibility for old-age security to 65 as promised, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced Thursday, committing to undo one of his predecessor’s policies.
It was part of a wide-ranging discussion where he shared some of his intentions for the budget, specifically, and for longer-term economic policy before a New York audience.
Trudeau noted the irony of the setting. It was also in a public forum abroad, hosted by a foreign news organization, where Stephen Harper announced the policy the Liberals are undoing — the plan to raise the retirement age two years to 67.
“There’s a nice parallel here,” Trudeau told a moderator at Bloomberg.


