You don't have to have a passport.and how they can affect civil liberties.
To the best of my understanding the new security features do not add any additional information collected about you, all it does is be able to store them securely on a chip so that it can be matched with the machine readable information already there.Its those security features that concern me more than the price, and how they can affect civil liberties.
Well technically, if you got the 5-year $60 passport and kept the other $60 in a high-yielding mutual fun (with an annual return of let's say 8%), by the time your passport expires, you will have $88 with compounded interest.In theory there is no difference between paying 60 every 5 years and 120 every 10.
They also get a crack at you every time you renew your insurance.To the best of my understanding the new security features do not add any additional information collected about you, all it does is be able to store them securely on a chip so that it can be matched with the machine readable information already there.
Personally I have no trouble paying twice the fee for twice the validity, providing that they can still issue the extra page passports for the same premium they currently do. I hate the pain in the ass of having to go in to renew passport, take pics etc. I also don't mind if ICBC was to double the fee and make the license valid for 10 years.
Lets add another variable to this equation. It will take approximately 20 mins to fill in an application, half an hour to an hour to take new pics, one hour waiting in line. and 15-20 mins going over the application with the clerk and probably another half hour to go pick it up. This works out to almost three working hours wasted. Whats' your hour worth?Well technically, if you got the 5-year $60 passport and kept the other $60 in a high-yielding mutual fun (with an annual return of let's say 8%), by the time your passport expires, you will have $88 with compounded interest.
Since 56% of Canadians have passports (19,310,356), collectively this new passport means we'll be missing out on more than 540 million dollars from potential interest earned.
*tucks calculator back into pocket protector*
Well technically, if you got the 5-year $60 passport and kept the other $60 in a high-yielding mutual fun (with an annual return of let's say 8%), by the time your passport expires, you will have $88 with compounded interest.
Since 56% of Canadians have passports (19,310,356), collectively this new passport means we'll be missing out on more than 540 million dollars from potential interest earned.
*tucks calculator back into pocket protector*






