Generation Squeeze says increased spending on Alberta's seniors would impact youth

Lobby group says Alberta NDP campaigned on increasing spending on seniors to more than $18,000 annually

Image | Senior spending could create gap says group

Caption: Increasing the amount of funding for seniors in Alberta could affect child care and education for younger generations, according to one lobby group. (CBC)

The gap between provincial spending on seniors and younger people in Alberta could increase with the NDP government's current platform, says a lobby group at University of British Columbia's School of Population Health.
Paul Kershaw of Generation Squeeze says the Alberta NDP will have a tough balancing act(external link) as proposed health care spending for seniors continues to increase.

Image | Paul Kershaw, Generation Squeeze

Caption: Paul Kershaw is the executive director with Generation Squeeze and a professor at University of British Columbia School of Population Health. (CBC)

"The NDP platform continues this national tradition of making trade-offs between medical care spending for retirees and investments in services that younger Albertans increasingly need," Kershaw, who is also a professor at UBC, said in a release Wednesday.
"As a result, Premier Notley's platform budgets only modest extra spending for grade school, post-secondary or child care by comparison with her health-care increases," he said.
Kershaw says the Alberta NDP campaigned on increasing spending on seniors to more than $18,000 annually, whereas spending on those under 45-years-old is about $7,800.
He thinks child care and education will suffer down the road.
Spending increases on seniors, however, is welcome news to advocacy groups like Public Interest Alberta(external link), who have called for thousands of new long-term beds to address what they call a crisis in seniors care.