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  • 2019-07-30 (xsd:date)
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  • No, Justin Trudeau did not direct Canada’s pension fund investments to India (en)
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  • A post claims that Prime Minister Justin Trudeau took two billion dollars from Canada’s retirement fund in order to give it to housing projects in India. This is false. The independent Canada Pension Plan Investment Board (CPPIB) has invested more than $8 billion in Indian ventures since 2009, but the Canadian prime minister plays no role in deciding how Canada Pension Plan funds are invested. A three year-old YouTube video resurfaced on July 25, when the Facebook page Justin Trudeau Not posted it alongside the caption: Trudeau directs 2 billion from Canada Pension Fund to Mumbai. Screenshot taken on July 29, 2019 of a Facebook post The video was also shared thousands of times via this 2016 article from the Cultural Action Party of Canada. According to data from CrowdTangle, that article was reposted in multiple Canadian Facebook groups in July 2019. Screenshot taken on July 30, 2019 of CrowdTangle data In the video, a man donning a t-shirt supporting a Conservative member of parliament claims that Trudeau took $2 billion from Canadian citizens’ retirement savings in order to fund housing projects in the Indian city of Mumbai. Based on the comments, several Facebook users understood that the Canadian prime minister stole the money from the pension fund in order to give it to India as a form of grant, as comments such as he should go to jail until he pays it all back, suggest. Screenshot taken on July 30, 2019 of comments on the Justin Trudeau Not Facebook post The claims made in the video are based on a 2016 Reuters article published on the CBC website citing a statement from the chief minister of Mumbai’s state of Maharashtra, Devendra Fadnavis. Fadnavis told reporters, A week back, the Canadian ambassador ... informed me that the Canadian pension fund is ready to invest $2 billion in Mumbai for affordable housing. Everything about that is totally not true, Darryl Konenbelt, director of media relations for the CPPIB, told AFP. That alleged $2 billion in housing is not true. AFP contacted the High Commission of Canada in India to verify if High Commissioner Nadir Patal has spoken with Fandavis, but it had not answered by the time of publication. Canada Pension Plan Investment Board’s India ventures The CPPIB is an independent institution in charge of investing funds from the Canada Pension Plan (CPP), Canada’s federal retirement scheme. The CPPIB manages the retirement savings of 20 million contributors, nearly all working individuals in Canada, outside Quebec, which has its own pension plan. CPPIB began to invest in India in 2009. In April 2019, Alain Carrier, CPPIB head of international, said in an interview that the investment board had invested Can$8.2 billion in the subcontinent, representing about 2 percent of the fund’s global exposure. India is one of 52 countries in which the CPP funds are invested, far behind the United States, the main recipient with Can$131.2 billion. The fund also invests Can$60.9 billion in Canada. Since the CPPIB manages public funds, most holdings and investments can be consulted online here . The Real Estate portfolio shows only two companies in India: Indospace Industrial and Phoenix Mills Limited . The former creates industrial and warehouse parks throughout India, while the latter builds retail-led mixed-use properties in Mumbai, Pune, Bangalore and Chennai, according to their respective websites. CPPIB staff did not wish to provide AFP with any further statements on the subject of the board’s investments in India. Government interference The claim that Trudeau influenced CPPIB investment decisions is false. Although the CPP is the country’s public pension, the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board Act guarantees CPPIB’s autonomy from the government. Screenshot taken on July 30, 2019 of the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board Act CPPIB’s twelve board directors are approved by the minister of finance. However, politicians have absolutely no influence on CPPIB’s investment decisions, Keith Ambachtsheer, director emeritus of the International Centre for Pension Management told AFP in an email. If any CPPIB board member is contacted by a politician on any investment matter, the Board member MUST report the encounter immediately, he added. The CPPIB’s web page also states that, the assets of the fund are managed in the best interest of the Canadian contributors and beneficiaries who participate in the Canada Pension Plan. These assets are strictly segregated from government funds. Have you seen content that you would like AFP Canada to verify? Contact us E-mail (en)
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