CONTENTS
Thursday, February 20, 1997
Mr. Speaker (Lethbridge) 8355
The Acting Speaker (Mr. Milliken) 8356
Bill C-84. Motions for introduction and first readingdeemed adopted 8357
Bill C-373. Motions for introduction and first readingdeemed adopted 8357
Bill C-374. Motions for introduction and first readingdeemed adopted 8357
Bill C-375. Motions for introduction and first readingdeemed adopted 8358
Motion moved and agreed to. 8359
Mr. White (Fraser Valley West) 8359
Mr. White (Fraser Valley West) 8359
Mr. White (Fraser Valley West) 8359
Mr. White (Fraser Valley West) 8359
Mr. Speaker (Lethbridge) 8359
Consideration resumed of budget motion, amendment andamendment to the amendment
8360
Mr. Speaker (Lethbridge) 8368
Mr. Martin (Esquimalt-Juan de Fuca) 8385
Mr. Scott (Fredericton-York-Sunbury) 8387
Mr. Gagnon (Bonaventure-Îles-de-la-Madeleine) 8387
Mr. Martin (LaSalle-Émard) 8390
Mr. Martin (LaSalle-Émard) 8391
Mr. Martin (LaSalle-Émard) 8391
Mrs. Tremblay (Rimouski-Témiscouata) 8391
Mrs. Tremblay (Rimouski-Témiscouata) 8392
Mr. Martin (LaSalle-Émard) 8392
Mr. Martin (LaSalle-Émard) 8392
Mr. Martin (LaSalle-Émard) 8393
Mr. Martin (LaSalle-Émard) 8394
Mr. Martin (LaSalle-Émard) 8395
Mr. Martin (LaSalle-Émard) 8395
Mr. Axworthy (Winnipeg South Centre) 8395
Mr. Axworthy (Winnipeg South Centre) 8396
Mrs. Tremblay (Rimouski-Témiscouata) 8396
Consideration resumed of budget motion, amendment andamendment to the amendment
8397
Motion moved and agreed to 8399
Consideration resumed of budget motion 8399
Mr. Bernier (Mégantic-Compton-Stanstead) 8415
Mr. Scott (Fredericton-York-Sunbury) 8417
Mr. White (Fraser Valley West) 8425
Amendment to the amendment negatived on division:Yeas, 17; Nays, 140 8428
Mr. O'Brien (London-Middlesex) 8430
8349
HOUSE OF COMMONS
Thursday, February 20, 1997
The House met at 10 a.m.
_______________
Prayers
_______________
ROUTINE PROCEEDINGS
[
Translation]
Mr. Paul Zed (Parliamentary Secretary to Leader of the
Government in the House of Commons, Lib.): Mr. Speaker,
pursuant to Standing Order 36(8), I have the honour to table, in
both official languages, the government's response to nine
petitions.
* * *
Hon. Marcel Massé (President of the Treasury Board and
Minister responsible for Infrastructure, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, on
behalf of the government, I have the honour to table, in both
official languages, a document entitled ``Getting Government
Right-Governing for Canadians''.
* * *
Hon. Marcel Massé (President of the Treasury Board and
Minister responsible for Infrastructure, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, I
also have the honour to table, in both official languages, a second
document entitled ``Program Expenditure Detail: A Profile of
Departmental Spending''.
* * *
A message from His Excellency the Governor General
transmitting Estimates of the sums required for the service of
Canada for the fiscal year ending March 31, 1998 was presented by
the Hon. the President of the Treasury Board and read by the
Speaker of the House.
Hon. Marcel Massé (President of the Treasury Board and
Minister responsible for Infrastructure, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, I
would also like to table, in support of the Estimates, Part I, the
Government Expenditure Plan.
In addition, I will table with the Clerk of the House, on behalf of
my colleagues, Part III of the Estimates consisting of 78
departmental expenditure plans. These documents will be
distributed to the members of the standing committees to assist in
their consideration of the spending authorities sought in Part II of
the Estimates.
* * *
[
English]
The Speaker: I have the honour to lay upon the table the
expenditure plan in relation to the 1997-98 estimates for the House
of Commons.
* * *
[
Translation]
Hon. Marcel Massé (President of the Treasury Board and
Minister responsible for Infrastructure, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, it is
my pleasure to table the Main Estimates of the Government of
Canada for the 1997-1998 fiscal year.
In 1993, the Red Book stated: ``We will exercise unwavering
discipline in controlling federal spending and will reorder current
spending priorities to make sure that maximum return is obtained
on each investment''.
These estimates mark the turning point: the point where we
regain control over government spending. The point where we
deliver public services adapted to today's reality.
[English]
As we promised in 1993, we are working to put the country's
financial house in order. The main estimates I am tabling today
contain expenditures that are closer to our means.
[Translation]
We are fully committed. We have worked hard and we are on the
verge of achieving our objectives.
8350
In the span of four years, we have significantly reduced the
deficit, we have built a more efficient public service. We are
working to deliver quality services to all Canadians.
(1010 )
For example, this year, Revenue Canada will process several
million tax returns, and it will do so in less than 10 days.
Environment Canada has rationalized its approach. The number
of weather offices was reduced from 71 local offices to 17 regional
offices. This was made possible by better use of modern equipment
and technology. Weather information and services provided to
Canadians will be improved.
[English]
By the end of the current fiscal year, the percentage of the gross
domestic product allocated to federal programs as a whole will be
the lowest it has been in almost 50 years. Government program
spending will account for only 11.9 per cent of the gross domestic
product in 1998-99 as opposed to 16.8 per cent in 1993-94.
[Translation]
Since it assumed responsibility, this government has reduced the
federal government's expenditures from $120 billion to $106
billion.
[English]
As we promised, we have changed the way in which we govern
even as we continue to put public finances in order. We took up the
fight and we will win the battle to provide our citizens with quality
government.
[Translation]
The people of Canada elected us because they had confidence in
us and believed, with just cause, that we could succeed. Our
expenditure plan will live up to their expectations, but we still have
a long way to go to transform government. This year we can
achieve our financial goals without announcing any new
reductions.
I left the public service and decided to enter the political arena in
order to protect the financial future of our country. I was already
dreaming of the day when I would be part of the birth of a new
culture of public financial management.
In December 1993, I said: ``Over time, governments collectively
have promised more than they could deliver- and delivered more
than they can afford''. Today marks a turning point in the history of
the administration of public finance in Canada. We have examined
our financial situation, made firm decisions, and taken action to
achieve our objectives. We have governed strongly and wisely.
But make no mistake: the battle has not yet been won. To relent
would be to stray from the path that we have set. We are readying
ourselves to enter the 21st century on sound and solid footing.
[English]
In February 1994 I told hon. members that we had to undertake
an in depth review of the roles and responsibilities of the federal
administration so that we could give the country a government
equipped to meet the challenges of the 21st century.
Program review has been the cornerstone of our strategy. Thanks
to this unprecedented exercise, we have been able to achieve our
deficit reduction targets, to improve the delivery of services to
Canadians and to clarify the role of the federal government in a
number of areas.
[Translation]
We have reformed the system of expenditure management. We
have inaugurated an ongoing program review, and soon will be in a
position to provide public services within our financial limitations.
We have created a stable long term planning framework for the
departments.
The program review has, among other things, led us to the
conclusion that, at the close of the 20th century, the state did not
need to be the owner of railways, airports, or even the St. Lawrence
Seaway in order to serve the taxpayers' interests. It enabled us to
more clearly define the areas in which the government can best be
involved in co-ordinating the actions of all citizens.
The main focus of public administration must still be the pursuit
of program excellence and quality, in keeping with our means and
with the needs of all of our fellow citizens.
(1015 )
Our mission has been developed without ever losing sight of the
goal of enhancing the measurement of outcomes and of
accountability. We are still faced with the challenge of maintaining
a culture of state administration which supports constant
improvement.
To that end, we have put in place a number of initiatives.
[English]
In partnership with industry we have eliminated half of the
administrative irritants identified by small businesses. By next
September, Veterans Affairs Canada for instance will have cut the
time it takes to process an initial disability claim in half. All of this
has been done while in fact spending less than we had predicted.
8351
[Translation]
While reducing costs and providing quality services to
Canadians, we are preparing partnerships with the provinces, the
private sector and the NGOs.
The Canada infrastructure program is one example of a
successful partnership.
Another is the transfer by Transport Canada last November of its
civil air navigation services to a private sector not-for-profit
agency, which today employs 6,000 former public servants.
[English]
Not only must program delivery reflect today's reality but most
important, it must meet the needs of Canadians. Soon Canadians
will be using more of the new information technologies to deal
with government. This is a more economical, more efficient
approach that will be accessible to Canadians at any place and at
any time. The government would like to develop cost recovery
more fully; however, we will move forward cautiously to avoid
obstacles that might unduly inhibit the competitiveness of
companies or the access of Canadians to services.
[Translation]
This tool will lead to a change of attitude in both public servants
and those who pay user fees. Departments will have to better tailor
their services to users' needs.
Thanks to the determined support of the public servants who
have been behind our undertaking for the past four years, we have
made considerable progress. Thanks to their innovative nature,
these public servants have proven their ability to adapt rapidly to
change, while keeping firmly in sight the objective of the pursuit of
excellence and the delivery of quality services.
Canada has an administrative system that is the envy of the rest
of the world. Yet we cannot rest on our laurels. The constantly and
rapidly evolving world economy demands greater efficiency and
greater rationalization of our operations.
Our public administration had become too unwieldy over the
years. The governmental machine had multiplied its areas of
intervention, and had built cumbersome and costly structures. After
reviewing the functions of the state, we were forced to reduce its
size.
[English]
However, we are treating our employees with civility and respect
as we move through the public service reduction process.
Accordingly, we established the early departure incentive program,
called the EDI, and the early retirement incentive program, or ERI,
both of which offset a number of the consequences of staff
reductions.
[Translation]
The number of federal public servants has gone from 225,000
down to 195,000 between April 1995 and December 1996.
We all want a modern and dynamic public service. We also want
a quality public service. We cannot afford to be left behind, nor to
let events overtake us. Accordingly, we have introduced a series of
measures and strategies to address this issue. The program known
as ``La Relève'' is the catalyst for building a modern and dynamic
public service.
[English]
The return to collective bargaining is another important step for
the government. I look forward to successful negotiations with the
unions. We are expecting a great deal from these negotiations. We
are looking for financial accountability. We are looking to establish
the concept of total compensation and we are looking at
transforming the public service.
(1020 )
[Translation]
Canada deserved a new way of managing public affairs. We have
a vision of the future that is shaped by the need to move forward
with pride.
I do not need surveys to know that Canadians are happy that their
financial independence is within reach and that they will soon be
free once again to choose the type of society they want.
[English]
Our vision held true as we improved results, assessment,
transparency and accountability. These changes mean that we can
establish a new public service culture in the best interests of all
Canadians.
[Translation]
We still have much to do, but I am proud of what we have
already accomplished.
The House will recall that last March we introduced, on a pilot
basis, a new format for six of the Part IIIs of the Estimates.
In October, I also tabled performance reports for 16 departments
and agencies. These reports provided the House with more detailed
information on the results achieved. And they brought this
information to members six months earlier than if we had waited
for the tabling of the traditional Part III. These documents were
well received and appreciated. They reflect our efforts to improve
the information we present to Parliament. We have therefore
decided to continue with the initiative this year.
The 16 departments and agencies have prepared outlook
documents, entitled ``Plans and Priorities", which I am tabling as
their
8352
Part IIIs. They are the outcome of discussions with members of the
House and the auditor general.
I would like to thank all of them for their valuable contribution,
especially the member for St. Boniface and the members of his
working group.
As further good news for Canadians, I am also making public
today another document: ``Getting Government Right-Governing
for Canadians''.
This document-which is close to my heart-is a report on the
current status of government reform, as well as a description of the
action we will be taking to achieve our goals.
We promised to create quality government. Canadians can be
proud of their government. We have kept our promises. We are
back on the right path-the path to cost-effectiveness and to
quality.
Mr. Richard Bélisle (La Prairie, BQ): Mr. Speaker, as the
minister said a few minutes ago, in 1997-98, the federal
government will budget nearly $106 billion for program spending,
2.9 per cent less than in the current fiscal year.
In his speech, the President of the Treasury Board seems to be
looking at the world through rose coloured glasses, and what he
says is far removed from the experience of thousands of public
servants who have been laid off or whose professional future is
uncertain.
Take, for instance, the situation at the cheque printing centres,
where employees, non-unionized and in a vulnerable position, were
given the choice of accepting a 40 per cent drop in salary or staying
home, when their service was privatized.
The minister's self-congratulatory tone is hardly appropriate,
considering the unemployed who are getting poorer because their
benefits were cut as a result of unemployment insurance reform,
while today, the Minister of Finance is using the UI fund surplus to
reduce his deficit artificially.
(1025)
The minister tells us, and I quote: ``We are working to put the
country's financial house in order''. How can the minister say that
when we know that 50 per cent of spending cuts represent cuts in
transfer payments to the provinces? Similarly, putting the country's
financial house in order explains only 21 per cent of spending cuts,
in other words, $1 out of every $5 committed by the government.
The minister went on to say, and again I quote: ``In the span of
four years, we have significantly reduced the deficit''. What the
minister should have said in the House this morning is that, in
addition to the provinces, the unemployed have also significantly
reduced the deficit, when we realize that the other major weapon in
the battle against the deficit is the unemployment insurance fund.
The minister also said: ``This year, we can achieve our financial
goals without announcing any new reductions''. However, as a
result of cuts in transfer payments, the provinces will have to cut
funding themselves and do the minister's dirty work.
Of this $14 billion in spending cuts, only $3 billion is directly
the result of spending cuts within the federal government. Does the
absence of new reductions mean the end of federal house cleaning
before the election?
Making the provinces pay and thus take the blame for spending
cuts in health care, education and social services and making the
unemployed pay as well, is that the beginning of a new culture in
public financial administration the minister has been bragging
about?
The minister also said the government was treating its
employees with civility and respect as it moved through the public
service reduction process. Where is the civility and respect in
refusing, as the minister himself did, to invest the $18 million
required to align the federal employee drug plan with the plan
under which all Quebecers will be covered once the Rochon plan is
in place?
In Quebec, maximum insurance coverage is $760 per year. This
means that federal employees who suffer from a serious medical
condition will have to pay 20 per cent of their drug costs however
high they may be, which could amount to thousands of dollars
every year.
In response to a question on this particular situation, the minister
told this House only 2 per cent of federal employees living in
Quebec may be affected. If so few of them are affected, why not put
them on an equal footing with the other 98 per cent, those who are
blessed with better health?
The minister added that, between April 1995 and the end of
December 1996, the federal public service shrank from 225,000 to
195,000 employees. We will have to check how much
contracting-out the government did during the same period,
especially now on the eve of a federal election.
This old Liberal habit of spending money they have not earned
yet is obvious here. Where is this financial independence the
minister is referring to when he tells us, as he did a moment ago,
that he does not need polls to tell him that Canadians are pleased
with regaining their financial independence, when the accumulated
debt is $600 billion? The only good news is that the debt collector
is no longer knocking at Canada's door? Thanks to the contribution
of the unemployed and the provinces, the threat of bankruptcy and
insolvency is not as imminent as it was four years ago.
Go ask the unemployed, those who despaired of ever finding
work and dropped out of the labour market altogether, and the
provincial finance ministers. Where is the financial independence
the minister is boasting about this morning?
8353
Here is an example of this old Liberal habit-one might even
call it an atavistic trait-to spend other people's money.
(1030)
At page 2-14, Part III, of the 1997-98 Estimates, we read the
following:
The government is considering obtaining four UPHOLDER class submarines
from the Royal Navy.
I hope Canada is no longer buying the old tubs that the British
Navy wanted to get rid of a few years ago. It goes on to say:
Delays in approving this project resulted in expenditures which were paid through
the operating budget, to support an additional program to overhaul OBERON class
submarines.
There is also $8.6 million to buy a patrol frigate by March 1997;
$61.3 million to buy sophisticated air-to-surface missiles.
However, as regards spinoffs for the Canadian industry, the defence
department document says: ``Since the weapons, pods, testing
material and spare parts will be bought through the American
government, the Canadian industry will not be directly involved in
the contracts''.
In other words, this document, the Estimates, is drafted in
Canada, but benefits the American industry.
Meanwhile, the minister is proud of these results.
Granted, the minister is an intelligent person. However, he does
not live in the same world as we do, he does not live in the same
world as Canadians do. That is the tragedy.
[English]
Mr. John Williams (St. Albert, Ref.): Mr. Speaker, I am
pleased to respond to the President of the Treasury Board's tabling
of the estimates this morning. I think that we have to point out that
not everything is as clear as he would like us to believe. I refer to
his speech in which he said ``we will exercise unwaivering
discipline in controlling federal spending''. That is a wonderful
statement.
When I looked at the Globe and Mail last week I happened to see
an article that said ``next week's government spending estimates
will prove the ad hoc and very political nature of the heritage
minister's eleventh hour $10 million gift for CBC because the
money won't be there''. Guess what, I checked the estimates and
the money is not there. There is a little column for last minute
add-ons for the political changes made by cabinet and sure enough
we find that the heritage minister at the very last minute, after the
estimates were printed, was able to squeak in another $10 for her
little favourite programs. So much for the unwaivering discipline
in controlling federal spending. Obviously it is completely and
totally subject to the whims of the people who have power around
here. Therefore we have to take a look at the political nature of the
rest of the documents to see what else we have found.
The President of the Treasury Board goes on to talk about the
fact that the percentage of program spending is going to be the
lowest in GDP for almost 50 years, but again he completely fails to
tell us about how much money in addition to program spending we
are paying in interest. Canadians have to take out $45 billion to $50
billion a year of their pockets to pay for interest for the past
mistakes of this government and the previous government. The
Tories and the Liberals combined for the last 25 years have been
spending with abandon. Now Canadians have to come up with $50
billion a year or the better part thereof just to pay for these
mistakes. They were not their mistakes, they were the
government's mistakes but guess who gets to pay. And that is the
shame of these estimates.
What else did we find in the president's speech: ``Over the last
few years the federal public service has grown too large and
therefore we have to make it smaller''. A wonderful statement but
what do find? Let us take Nav Canada. Again in his speech he
referred to the fact that he has transferred 6,000 former federal
employees into this hybrid crown corporation, not for profit
organization, hid from the auditor general organization; 6,000
federal employees and he claims he is reducing the public service.
(1035)
Not one person lost their job. It was a transfer from one
department into a not for profit agency. Nothing changed. Yet he
would have us believe that he is downsizing the federal civil
service, that we are getting more efficient and that we can manage
our money better. Wrong. Completely wrong.
We saw the Minister of Finance stand up in this House and heard
him boast about his accomplishments, how he has brought down
spending, how he has brought it under control and how we are
finally getting the federal government's fiscal house in order.
When we look at it, we find that the federal government is
getting its house in order again at the expense of somebody else.
Remember how I said that the taxpayers have to pay for the
government's mistakes. We are also finding that provincial
governments are now paying for the federal government's saying it
is getting the job done. The health and social transfer to the
provinces is how it is doing it.
Last year the federal government transferred to the provinces
$14.9 billion for health, education and social services tax. This year
it is only going to spend $12.5 billion. That is a reduction of $2.5
billion right there that did not reduce the size of the federal
government one inch.
It did not reduce the number of civil servants by one. It was a
case of passing the buck to the provinces and saying ``you will do
with less in order for us to balance our budget''. Is that responsible
8354
government? Is that the way we want to manage our federal
government, by passing the buck to the provinces with $2.5 billion
less while Canadians are saying ``what about my health care, it has
fallen to pieces''? Does it care?
It cares about the Minister of Finance's being able to stand up
and boast about his accomplishments. We read in the paper and I
see in Edmonton, where I come from, that people have been denied
emergency services, that people have died because they have had to
transfer from one hospital to another in an emergency. They died in
the process because there was not a bed available for them.
This government is cutting $2.5 billion in cash from health and
education. It says it is a good job. The other day the Minister of
Finance stood up and said ``Boy, am I good. I am going to throw
another couple or three hundred million dollars back into health
care. Is that not good news?''
Compare that to the cut of $2.5 billion from health care in one
year. That is terrible news. Canadians ought to know what is really
going on when it comes to this government's management of health
care for Canadians. Abysmal. Downright abysmal.
We have also heard the Minister of Finance tell us about how
interest rates have come down and how he is saving all kinds of
money. Let us recognize that interest rates are down right around
the world. They are down in Japan. There are practically non
existent there. They are down in the United States. They are down
in the United Kingdom. They are down all through Europe.
I wonder if the minister is taking credit for all that, too. The
reality is he just happened to catch the benefit of a wave that was
going around the world. Let us remember that interest rates came
down not because the Minister of Finance caused it. He just
happened to get the benefit of it.
This year we are going to see a reduction, finally, in the cost of
our debt. It is going to drop by $1.8 billion, the prediction is, down
to $46 billion. Let us remember that it was not the management of
this government and it was not the management of this Minister of
Finance that caused it.
Thankfully Canadians who have mortgages and loans with taxes
to pay are getting the benefit of it. Again there are the seniors who
would rely on their investment to give a little enhancement to their
quality of life on top of the pittance this government gives them.
What happened to their incomes?
(1040 )
I did not hear the Minister of Finance say seniors are going to be
better off because interest rates are coming down. While he was
boasting that someone with a big mortgage would save $500 a
month, he did not say that the senior who has a $100,000
investment is going to lose $500 a month. I did not hear him say
that, but that is what happened.
My hon. colleague is going to be retiring after the election. He is
going to have to suffer because his investments are going to bring
him less money. Does the Minister of Finance care? Perhaps not.
The point is there are hundreds of thousands of Canadians across
this land who are being squeezed by the reduction in interest rates,
squeezed by taxes going up, squeezed because health care is not
there for them, all because the Minister of Finance says ``boy, am I
doing a great job''. Canadians know he is not doing a great job.
They know that their jobs are potentially in jeopardy. One in four
Canadians is concerned about a job. There are 1.5 million
unemployed who are looking for a job, and high taxes are
destroying these opportunities.
University graduates are asking how to get a job. The Minister of
Finance is saying they will have an extra six months to before they
have to start to repay their student loans. Let me assure the House
that each and every one of them would rather have a job
opportunity than an opportunity to defer the payment of a student
loan. But these are the types of things that are going on that we do
not hear about. We did not hear it in the government's tabling of the
estimates.
I refer to the people in power seeming to be able to get what they
want. In a stack of documents I have here there is a little interest in
what is going on in the department of heritage. If I remember the
numbers clearly, while the Minister of Finance says: ``I am
squeezing everybody, everybody is having to do with less'', does
anybody get more? Yes, the Deputy Prime Minister and the
minister of heritage gets more. I think she gets about $90 million
more, an 8.4 per cent increase in her budget.
An hon. member: Her Canada pension payments.
Mr. Williams: Not her Canada pension payments, it is for the
little programs she wants, the CBC, $10 million; flags for
everybody, another few million dollars; the information office, $20
million. She gets what she wants and everybody else has to do with
less.
She is on the left side of the party and she thinks government
exists to spend money, government exists to manage the economy
and manage people's money properly. She does not even know
what that means. That is why these estimates fall in hard behind the
budget. It tells us that Canadians are being duped by the
government.
The other thing I want to point out is the smoke and mirrors. The
Minister of Finance said that program spending is coming down
and we are finally getting a handle on this. But let us take a look at
the numbers. CRTC's budget in the main estimates is down by $18
million, from $22 million to $3 million. Wow, what is going on
here? I checked into it and I found that the revenues that were
collected have been netted against the expenditures for the depart-
8355
ment. Therefore rather than showing the $22 million which is
normally spent, the revenues have now been netted out and they are
down to $3 million. But it is still going to spend $22 million.
So what has changed other than the numbers on the piece of
paper? The facts are that the way the numbers are presented would
lead one to believe that major progress is being made. But when we
ask the questions behind it, we find that is not the case. That is the
story of the government. That is the story everywhere.
(1045 )
It does not matter if the department of heritage states at the last
minute that it wants another $10 million out of taxpayers to get
their favourite programs on TV. It does not matter if it is the
President of the Treasury Board who stands and says that civil
servant numbers are coming down. He is just moving them off the
balance sheet. It does not matter if the Minister of Finance stands
up and says that interest rates are coming down because of his great
management. That is also wrong.
I could go on and on. The point is that the election is coming up
and Canadians will have a real choice between the fiscal
responsibility and management by the Reform Party and the fiscal
irresponsibility by this government.
Mr. Taylor: Mr. Speaker, on a point of order. I am wondering if I
might have unanimous consent to reply on behalf of the New
Democratic Party to the tabling of the estimates.
The Acting Speaker (Mr. Milliken): Is there unanimous
consent?
Some hon. members: Agreed.
Some hon. members: No.
The Acting Speaker (Mr. Milliken): I hear nos.
Mr. Ray Speaker (Lethbridge, Ref.): Mr. Speaker, I rise on a
point of order.
I was wondering if the estimates that have just been tabled are in
order considering a motion that was passed by this House
approximately one year ago. This motion gave direction to this
House as well as to components of the legislative branches of
government.
Today in raising this matter, I think it is the first time that the
motion could be put in its context and be applied to the business of
the House and in this case, the business of supply.
To remind us, back on December 11, 1995, we passed a motion
in this House of Commons that reads in part as follows:
Whereas the people of Quebec have expressed the desire for recognition of
Quebec's distinct society;
(2) the House recognize that Quebec's distinct society includes its
French-speaking majority, unique culture and civil law tradition;
(3) the House undertake to be guided by this reality;
Mr. Speaker, that is the part of the resolution which I want you to
take under consideration, ``that the House undertake to be guided
by this reality''.
The fourth part reads:
(4) the House encourage all components of the legislative and executive branches
of government to take note of this recognition and be guided in their conduct
accordingly.
Mr. Speaker, that is the item I am raising in this point of order, as
to whether this motion has been considered in the process of
determining the presentation of supply to the House. Mr. Speaker, I
refer you to Beauchesne's sixth edition, citation 553:
Every question when agreed to assumes the form either of an order or a resolution
of the House. By its orders the House directs its committees, its Members, its officers,
the order of its own proceedings and the acts of all persons they concern;
Mr. Speaker, I would like to ask if you considered what the
motion's procedural significance had on the receivability of the
supply here today and would have on other bills, motions,
amendments, questions and other proceedings that are going to be
placed before the House. If you read the motion that was passed by
this House as I did, the government and this House must take the
reality that Quebec is a distinct society into consideration in all that
they do.
On page 16972 of Hansard, the Prime Minister tried to clarify
the motion when he said to us in this assembly:
Once it is passed, this resolution will have an impact on how legislation is passed
in the House of Commons. I remind Canadians that the legislative branch will be
bound by this resolution, as will be the executive branch.
Today the minister is a representative of the executive branch.
This is a real, dynamic recognition, recorded in the very heart of our country's
government.
(1050 )
Considering that the distinct society motion has been in effect
for over a year, those so ordered by this House have had sufficient
time to take the reality that Quebec is a distinct society into
consideration when planning budgets and drafting bills, including
any change as to how the proceedings of this House conform to that
order.
It is our responsibility at this time to ask those so ordered by this
House how they have considered the motion. You, Mr. Speaker, by
virtue of this motion have been ordered to do so. The minister who
just tabled the estimates has been so ordered. While under those
orders did he confer upon Quebec any rights, any privileges or
benefits not conferred upon the other provinces of Canada? That is
a very key question.
8356
In conclusion, many Canadians agree that Quebec is a distinct
society. However, they are concerned with the impact it would
have on them if it were entrenched in the Constitution. They are
also concerned with having this reality, as the Prime Minister
described it, recorded-
The Acting Speaker (Mr. Milliken): Order, please. I have
listened very patiently to the hon. member in spite of some
concerns that others may be having and I fail to see any tie-in
between the point of order that he has raised and the form of the
estimates. I fail to understand why it would be that the estimates,
which appear to be in the normal form for estimates as required by
the rules and orders of this House and by our longstanding practice,
should take on a different form based on the point which the hon.
member has raised.
Accordingly, having heard nothing that would convince me there
is anything irregular whatever in the form of these estimates, I can
only say that I believe the hon. member's point of order is not well
taken. I think we should proceed with the business of the House.
[Translation]
Mr. Duceppe: Mr. Speaker, I think your decision is in fact
justified, and this is proof that the distinct society resolution meant
absolutely nothing because, as you see, in something as important
as the budget, it has no application.
The Acting Speaker (Mr. Milliken): I would ask the hon.
member to be circumspect and not to put words in the Speaker's
mouth. I merely indicated that the hon. member for Lethbridge was
out of order in questioning the Estimates tabled by the minister and
recommended by His Excellency in the House today and the
resolution we passed. That is all that I said.
[English]
I do not want the hon. member from the Bloc Quebecois to draw
any other inference from what the Chair said as he is trying to do at
this time.
I would suggest we move on to the regular business of the
House. I do not believe that a point of order has been raised.
I will hear the hon. member for Lethbridge briefly, but I have
listened very patiently and I think he has had a fair hearing on this
matter.
Mr. Speaker (Lethbridge): Mr. Speaker, I appreciate the time
which you have allotted to me because the matter is of very great
significance.
I would ask for a clarification on your ruling. I am not
questioning your ruling but in terms of clarification, with respect to
the motion which was passed on December 11, 1995, are you
saying that the House or a member of the executive council does
not have to consider that motion as ordered by the House as it
relates to a piece of legislation or the estimates of today or any
other matter? Is that what I interpreted-
The Acting Speaker (Mr. Milliken): No. I simply said that the
hon. member had failed to show that there was anything in the
estimates which was not in compliance with the motion. I
respectfully suggest that was his point. Having failed to prove it on
any cogent argument, in my view the point of order is not well
taken and I so rule.
I am prepared to move on with the business of the House at this
point.
Mr. Williams: Mr. Speaker, my hon. colleague from Lethbridge
specifically referred to the motion passed in the House on
December 11, 1995 and the fact that this House will take these
things into consideration.
The estimates which were tabled this morning by the President
of the Treasury Board contained no reference whatsoever that this
motion has been addressed in the preparation of these documents.
Therefore, I ask that the-
The Acting Speaker (Mr. Milliken): Order. I have already
ruled on this point. I think the hon. member is re-arguing the point.
The Chair has given a ruling and I think it is quite clear. There was
no evidence put forward in any of the lengthy argument of the hon.
member for Lethbridge to show that there was anything irregular in
the tabling of these estimates. I am sure that we could get into a
protracted debate as to whether the estimates have taken into
consideration the point that was adopted by the House in the
resolution to which the hon. member for Lethbridge has referred. I
suggest that is a matter for debate. It is not a matter of a point of
order.
(1055 )
The minister and the members who wish to argue this point can
do so on one of the allotted days when we will be considering these
estimates, as no doubt we will be over the next coming months. I
suggest that it is a matter for debate. It is not a point of order. The
estimates appear on their face to be in order and I respectfully
request that we move on.
[Translation]
Mr. Duceppe: Mr. Speaker, I need some clarification.
This distinct society motion indicated that, in all its actions and
decisions, the government was to take this reality into account.
That was what was passed.
That being said, the estimates bear, among other things, on the
heritage department. Through the issue of culture, whether Quebec
or Canadian-
The Acting Speaker (Mr. Milliken): Order, please. This is the
same point. As I said, we have already ruled.
8357
[English]
Mr. John English (Kitchener, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, I have the
honour to present in both official languages the fifth report of the
Standing Committee on Foreign Affairs and International Trade.
This is the first report of the subcommittee on sustainable human
development entitled: ``Ending Child Labour Exploitation: A
Canadian Agenda for Action on Global Challenges''.
I would also like to thank the witnesses who appeared before the
committee as well as the members of Parliament for their work on
this committee. This is a very important report that I think will
guide the government in its approach to this very significant
question.
[Translation]
Mrs. Maud Debien (Laval East, BQ): Mr. Speaker, ``The State
of the World's Children'' is the title of the latest Unicef report,
from which I quote the following: ``Today, over 250 million
children around the world-in countries rich and poor-work and
many of them are at risk from hazardous and exploitative labour.
Denied education and trapped in cycles of poverty, their most basic
rights, their health and even their lives are in jeopardy. The
contributing factors are multiple and overlapping, including the
exploitation of poverty, lack of access to education, and traditional
restrictions, particularly for girls''.
Today, the government is tabling the report of the sub-committee
on sustainable human development on this same topic, along with a
proposed action plan on this intolerable situation.
I must say that the Bloc Quebecois members took part in the
activities of this sub-committee with interest. Our active
participation contributed to improving the report, and the
government party accepted almost all of our recommendations.
We must point out, however, first of all, that the conditions under
which the final report was drafted and translated into French are
unacceptable.
I would just like to indicate that we played a significant part in
the drafting of this report, and we are calling for the government to
implement its 19 recommendations as promptly as possible.
* * *
Hon. Lucienne Robillard (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration, Lib.) moved for leave to introduce Bill C-84, an act
to amend the Citizenship Act and the Immigration Act.
(Motions deemed adopted, bill read the first time and printed.)
* * *
(1100)
Mr. Jean-Paul Marchand (Québec-Est, BQ) moved for leave
to introduce Bill C-373, an act to amend the Federal-Provincial
Fiscal Arrangements Act (provincial legislation contravening the
Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms).
He said: Mr. Speaker, I am, in fact, introducing two bills whose
purpose is to wake up francophone members outside Quebec who
are usually asleep or hide their heads in the sand when enforcement
of the Official Languages Act in Canada is at stake. The President
of the Treasury Board, when he was principal secretary at Foreign
Affairs, even tossed out the Official Languages Act.
This bill is intended to give enforcement of the Official
Languages Act in Canada more teeth. It would ensure that funding
earmarked for Canadian francophone communities gets to those
communities. Unfortunately, this money is appropriated by the
provinces for other purposes.
The bill therefore suggests that transfer payments to those
provinces be reduced, if the money does not go to these
communities or if the provinces violate the Canadian Constitution
as it applies to the minority rights of francophones. That is, in fact,
the case in most Canadian provinces.
(Motions deemed adopted, bill read the first time and printed.)
* * *
Mr. Jean-Paul Marchand (Québec-Est, BQ) moved for leave
to introduce Bill C-374, an act to amend the Federal-Provincial
Fiscal Arrangements Act (social services for the French linguistic
minority of a province).
He said: Mr. Speaker, the second bill is along the same lines as
the first one. Its purpose is to ensure that the provinces that do not
use the portion of transfer payments which is designated for
francophone communities are fined accordingly by the federal
government, in other words, an equivalent amount is cut from
transfers to the provinces if the amounts allocated to francophone
communities do not go to those communities.
(Motions deemed adopted, bill read the first time and printed.)
8358
[English]
Mr. Leon E. Benoit (Vegreville, Ref.) moved for leave to
introduce Bill C-375, an act to amend the Agreement on Internal
Trade Implementation Act.
He said: Mr. Speaker, it is a pleasure for me to introduce my
private member's bill, an act to amend the Agreement on Internal
Trade Implementation Act.
The agreement on internal trade that was signed nearly three
years ago was a start. However, it has not yet been completed. The
main obstacle to the completion of this agreement is the use of the
term consensus as it has been used by the negotiating committee
comprised of cabinet level representatives from federal, provincial
and territorial governments.
This committee has interpreted the definition of consensus to
mean unanimity. Therefore, any one government, regardless of
population, can impeded the progress of the agreement, and indeed
that of the Canadian economic union.
My bill will allow the federal government to use its
constitutional responsibility under sections 91 and 121 of the
Constitution to complete sections of the agreement on internal
trade. It is important to note that this action will be taken only in
situations where co-operative agreement between the provinces has
been sought and not reached.
(1105 )
This proposed approval formula will require agreement among
at least two-thirds of the provinces that have at least 50 per cent of
the Canadian population. This provision will facilitate the removal
of internal trade barriers and present growth opportunities to
Canadian businesses which previously have been restricted by
these barriers.
(Motions deemed adopted, bill read the first time and printed.)
* * *
[
Translation]
Hon. Marcel Massé (President of the Treasury Board and
Minister responsible for Infrastructure, Lib.): Mr. Speaker,
pursuant to the provisions of Standing Order 81(4), as amended for
the 1997-98 fiscal year, and Standing Order 81(6), I move that the
Main Estimates be referred to the Standing Committees of the
House.
Since the list is rather lengthy, I would ask that the list be printed
in Hansard at this point without being read.
The Acting Speaker (Mr. Milliken): Is it agreed?
Some hon. members: Agreed.
Mr. Massé: I move the following motion:
That the Main Estimates for the fiscal year ending March 31, 1998, laid upon the
Table on February 20, 1997, be referred to the appropriate Standing Committees of
the House, according to the detailed distribution list here appended.
[
Editor's Note: List mentioned above follows:]
To the Standing Committee on Aboriginal Affairs and Northern Development
Indian Affairs and Northern Development, Votes 1, 5, 10, 15, L20, L25, L30, 35,
40, 45 and 50
To the Standing Committee on Agriculture and Agri-Food
Agriculture and Agri-Food, Votes 1, 5, 10 and 15
to the Standing Committee on Canadian Heritage
Canadian Heritage, Votes 1, 5, 10, 15, L20, 25, 30, 35, 40, 45, 50, 55, 60, 65, 70, 75,
80, 85, 90, 95, 100, 105, 110, 115, 120, 125, 130, 140 and 145
To the Standing Committee on Citizenship and Immigration
Citizenship and Immigration, Votes 1, 5, 10 and 15
To the Standing Committee on Environment and Sustainable Development
Environment, Votes 1, 5, 10 and 15
Privy Council, Vote 30
To the Standing Committee on Finance
Finance, Votes 1, 5, L10, 15, 20, L25, 35 and 40
National Revenue, Votes 1, 5, and 10
To the Standing Committee on Fisheries and Oceans
Fisheries and Oceans, Votes 1, 5 and 10
To the Standing Committee on Foreign Affairs and International Trade
Foreign Affairs, Votes 1, 5, 10, 15, 20, 25, L30, L35, 40, 45, 50 and 55
To the Standing Committee on Government Operations
Canadian Heritage, Vote 135
Governor General, Vote 1
Parliament, Vote 1
Privy Council, Votes 1, 5, 10 and 35
Public Works and Government Services, Votes 1, 5, 10, 15, 20, 25, 30 and 35
Treasury Board, Votes 1, 5, 10, 15 and 20
To the Standing Committee on Health
Health, Votes 1, 5, 10, 15, 20, 25 and 30
To the Standing Committee on Human Resources Development
Human Resources Development, Votes 1, 5, 10, 15, 20, 25, 30 and 35
To the Standing Committee on Human Rights and the Status of Persons with
Disabilities
Justice, Vote 10
To the Standing Committee on Industry
Industry, Votes 1, 5, L10, L15, 20, 25, 30, 35, 40, 45, 50, 55, 60, 65, 70, 75, 80, 85, 90,
95, 100, 105, 110, 115 and 120
8359
To the Standing Committee on Justice and Legal Affairs
Justice, Votes 1, 5, 15, 20, 25, 30, 35, 40 and 45
Privy Council, Vote 40
Solicitor General, Votes 1, 5, 10, 15, 20, 25, 30, 35, 40, 45 and 50
To the Standing Committee on National Defence and Veterans Affairs
National Defence, Votes 1, 5 and 10
Veterans Affairs, Votes 1, 5 and 10
To the Standing Committee on Natural Resources
Natural Resources, Votes 1, 5, 10, L15, 20, 25, 30 and 35
To the Standing Committee on Procedure and House Affairs
Parliament, Vote 5
Privy Council, Vote 20
To the Standing Committee on Public Accounts
Finance, Vote 30
To the Standing Committee on Transport
Privy Council, Vote 15
Transport, Votes 1, 5, 10, 15, 20, 25, 30, 35 and 40
To the Standing Joint Committee on Library of Parliament
Parliament, Vote 10
To the Standing Joint Committee on Official Languages
Privy Council, Vote 25
(Motion agreed to.)
* * *
[
English]
Mr. Randy White (Fraser Valley West, Ref.): Mr. Speaker, I
have four petitions. The first petition suggests that the charter of
rights and freedoms protects all Canadians, including those
convicted of crimes. Victims of crimes require specific rights in the
justice system.
Therefore the petitioners call on Parliament to support the
private member's activities and developments of the victims' bill
of rights in this House.
Mr. Randy White (Fraser Valley West, Ref.): Mr. Speaker, the
second petition says that in June 1996 the Prime Minister of
Canada announced he would work toward diverting the Sable
Island gas pipeline to Quebec City. It is unacceptable for the Prime
Minister to decide the destination of Nova Scotia natural gas
without consulting Nova Scotians.
Therefore, Nova Scotians assert their right to control the
destination of Sable Island gas and demand that the federal
government cease tampering in this issue.
Mr. Randy White (Fraser Valley West, Ref.): Mr. Speaker, the
third petition calls on Parliament to urge the federal government to
join with provincial governments to make the national highway
system upgrading possible.
Mr. Randy White (Fraser Valley West, Ref.): Mr. Speaker, the
fourth petition requests that Parliament not increase the federal
excise tax on gasoline and strongly consider reallocating its current
revenues to rehabilitate Canada's crumbling national highways.
Mr. Ray Speaker (Lethbridge, Ref.): Mr. Speaker, I would like
to present a petition on behalf of 97 of my constituents who are
concerned about the impeding March 31, 1998 expiry of the
National AIDS Strategy.
The signatories call on Parliament to urge the Prime Minister
and the Minister of Health to commit to a renewal of the National
AIDS Strategy with at least the current level of funding.
Mr. Len Taylor (The Battlefords-Meadow Lake, NDP): Mr.
Speaker, pursuant to Standing Order 36, I am pleased to present a
petition signed by residents of my constituency, residents of the
cities of North Battleford and Lloydminster and the towns of
Paynton, Onion Lake and Battleford.
The petitioners note that 38 per cent of the national highway
system is substandard, that the national highway policy study
identified job creation, economic development, national unity,
saving lives and avoiding injury, lower congestion, lower vehicle
operating costs and better international competitiveness as benefits
of the proposed national highway program.
(1110 )
The petitioners call on Parliament to urge the federal
government to join with the provinces to make the national
highway system upgrading possible.
Mr. Monte Solberg (Medicine Hat, Ref.): Mr. Speaker,
pursuant to Standing Order 36, I have two petitions to present. The
first calls on Parliament to urge the federal government to join with
the provincial governments to make the national highway system
upgrading possible beginning in 1997.
Mr. Monte Solberg (Medicine Hat, Ref.): Mr. Speaker, the
second petition calls on Parliament to conduct a full public inquiry
into the relationship between lending institutions and the judiciary,
and to enact legislation restricting the appointment of judges with
ties to credit granting institutions.
Mr. Darrel Stinson (Okanagan-Shuswap, Ref.): Mr.
Speaker, I wish to file a petition from residents of British Columbia
pointing out that gasoline is a necessity and that most of today's
gasoline costs to consumers are made up of taxes.
8360
Nevertheless, two Liberal dominated committees have
recommended still another federal gas tax increase added to the
incredible 566 per cent increase in the past decade.
The petition requests no new gas taxes and for the government to
use existing gas taxes to improve Canada's crumbling national
highways.
Mr. Jim Jordan (Leeds-Grenville, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, I have
a petition from citizens in my riding, places like Merrickville,
Brockville and North Augusta.
The petitioners request that Parliament support the immediate
initiation and conclusion by the year 2000 of an international
convention which will set out a binding timetable for the abolition
of all nuclear weapons.
Mr. Paul Szabo (Mississauga South, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, I have
two petitions which have been circulating across Canada. The first
comes from Delta, B.C.
The petitioners would like to draw to the attention of the House
that our police and firefighters place their lives at risk on a daily
basis as they serve the emergency needs of all Canadians.
They also state that in many cases the families of police officers
and firefighters killed in the line of duty are often left without
sufficient financial means to meet their obligations.
The petitioners therefore pray and call on Parliament to establish
a public safety officers compensation fund to receive gifts and
bequests for the benefit of families of police officers and
firefighters killed in the line of duty.
Mr. Paul Szabo (Mississauga South, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, the
second petition comes from Calgary, Alberta.
The petitioners would like to draw to the attention of the House
that managing the family home and caring for preschool children is
an honourable profession that has not been recognized for its value
to our society.
The petitioners therefore pray and call on Parliament to pursue
initiatives to assist families who choose to provide care in the home
for preschool children, the chronically ill, the aged or the disabled.
* * *
Mr. Paul Zed (Parliamentary Secretary to Leader of the
Government in the House of Commons, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, I ask
that all questions be allowed to stand.
The Deputy Speaker: Is that agreed?
Some hon. members: Agreed.
[Translation]
The Deputy Speaker: I wish to inform the House that because
of the ministerial statement, Government Orders will be extended
by 37 minutes.
* * *
[
English]
The House resumed from February 19 consideration of the
motion that this House approves in general the budgetary policy of
the government; the amendment, and the amendment to the
amendment.
Mr. Monte Solberg (Medicine Hat, Ref.): Mr. Speaker, it is a
pleasure to respond to the budget presented by the finance minister
earlier this week.
I want to begin by pointing out that a budget can never be looked
at in isolation from what is going on in the country. It can never be
looked at in isolation from the government's history, nor from what
is going on in the current economic and social climate.
Frankly, that is the great weakness of the government's budget. It
wanted to give the impression that this was a budget about which
Canadians should feel very good, that all the problems of the past
were behind us and now we can look forward to a bright future.
When the government presents a budget that implicitly says that,
it ignores what is going on in the real world.
(1115 )
The fact is many Canadians today are asking ``If this is such a
good budget, why am I not seeing any of the benefits? Why am I
not, for instance, able to find a job? Why can I not rely on the
health care system? What about the pension system''? Those are
the kinds of questions people in the real world are asking today. I
did not see any of that reflected the budget we heard just two days
ago.
Some have referred to this budget as the fudge-it budget. I think
that is a good name because this budget is remarkable not for what
is in it but for what is not in it. A budget should take into account
all the big issues that are out there today, particularly economic
issues. The budget sets the agenda for the government for the entire
year. However, if it does not address the issues that Canadians are
concerned about, to that degree it has no relevancy to what is going
on in the real world. Obviously if the government is going to show
leadership, be responsible and accountable to Canadians then the
budget should be relevant to the situation of Canadians today. But I
do not think the budget is. I think the budget completely missed the
point on some very important issues.
8361
I mentioned a minute ago that people today are concerned about
jobs. I was astounded when I read the budget document and the
booklet dedicated to the issue of employment that there was not
one reference to the fact that taxes kill jobs. I heard the minister
say in this place that taxes, payroll taxes, are a cancer on job
creation. Many people in this place have said the same thing. But
in that whole document there was nary a reference to the fact that
payroll taxes kill jobs.
It would be bad enough at any time, but coming five days after
the finance minister announced a 70 per cent in payroll taxes for
the Canada pension plan is absolutely astounding. How could he
not know that Canadians were going to be outraged by a
tremendous increase in taxes, the largest tax increase in the history
of the country? There was no reference to the impact it would have
on job creation.
When the government thinks it is going in its favour and
announces a 10 cent or a 30 cent decrease in UI premiums, it crows
about how many jobs that will create. It alleges that a 30 cent
decrease in UI premiums will create 40,000 jobs. But on a huge 70
per cent increase in CPP premiums, there is not a word on how
many jobs it will kill. There is not one word in the budget. Nowhere
is it seen.
To bring forward a budget five days after it announced that CPP
premiums were going to go up a whopping 70 per cent and to not
even mention it is simply outrageous, neglectful of the
responsibilities of the finance minister. Frankly, it proves beyond a
shadow of a doubt how out of touch the government is with the
concerns of ordinary Canadians.
During the last election campaign the government ran on the
issue of jobs, jobs, jobs. When I went through the jobs document I
did not see a single reference to the 9.7 per cent unemployment
rate. It was nowhere to be found in the document. There were some
words in the budget speech about how we should be concerned
about joblessness. However, in the jobs booklet, an appendage to
the budget document, under the section of economic indicators one
would think that somewhere in there would be a mention of the 9.7
per cent unemployment rate. Somewhere it would mention that we
have 1.5 million unemployed Canadians.
Hon. member across the way will correct me if I am wrong, but I
believe that going into the last election we also had 1.5 million
unemployed Canadians and he government ran on the promise of
jobs, jobs, jobs.
(1120 )
We had 1.5 million unemployed Canadians at that point. Three
and a half years later we present a budget with no mention of the
fact that we still have 1.5 million unemployed Canadians. If the
Liberals ran on that promise I would suggest, in the strongest
possible language, that they have completely failed to keep that
promise. The promise was a sham, it has not been fulfilled and
Canadians have been let down, including the millions of Canadians
who voted for the Liberals based on the promise that they would
soon find employment. It simply did not happen.
One of the things that was not mentioned in the budget
document, even though the Liberals had to put some numbers in
but was not remarked on in any significant way is the fact that
revenues have gone up dramatically under the Liberal government.
Tax revenues have gone up dramatically. If we look at the five year
mandate of the government, according to its own numbers going
from 1993, including its projections for next year, its total tax
revenues will go up about $30 billion. That means a 30 per cent
increase.
However, if we look at what has happened to the incomes of
ordinary Canadians, I would argue that in a direct comparison
ordinary Canadians have fared very poorly. Their incomes have
gone down 10 per cent. The government's income has gone up 30
per cent. There was no recognition of that in the budget.
Again, I think the budget should be relevant to Canadians. It
should reflect what is going on in the real world. It is fine for the
finance minister to speak from the Ottawa bubble and suggest that
things are going well, but it ain't necessarily so back in the real
world.
Taxes not only kill jobs but they make it impossible for people to
fulfil their dreams. We should remember that the whole point of
having a budget and of having a government is to serve the people.
That is why we are here, we are public servants. However, I do not
believe that has been reflected at all in this budget document either.
I would argue that what we find when we read the budget are a
lot of self-congratulations and an attempt by the government to put
the best possible face on a very bad situation.
I mentioned a minute ago that people are not able to fulfil their
dreams because of the staggering level of taxes. However, that is
probably the best case scenario for some people. For many people
who went bankrupt, including all those people who went bankrupt
last year as result of this government's high tax policy, it has been a
complete and utter disaster. In 1996 in this country we faced record
bankruptcies. That is not a surprise because, after all, we had
record high levels of taxation. We had record high levels of
personal indebtedness. We saw disposable incomes fall by $3,000
from the time the government came to power in 1993. Again, that
was nowhere reflected in the budget documents. I believe it again
reflects a disconnectedness with where Canadians are at today.
There are other reasons why I think we need to refer to this
document as a fudge-it budget that does not give the whole story.
8362
One of the things that the government and the minister crowed
about was the new spending initiatives that he introduced in the
budget, about $1 billion a year over two years.
However, what he did not say, and we should always point this
out when we have a debt approaching $600 billion, is that this
reinvestment was with borrowed money. That is the first thing we
need to point out.
The second thing we need to point out when the government is
proposing to spend new money on areas that it asserts are important
to Canadians, and I believe it is right when it says that, is that when
it spends a billion dollars in areas like research and development or
health care initiatives it should, to be fair, point out that it also cut
$7.5 billion from the Canada health and social transfer and it has
made cuts to research and development in the past.
(1125 )
The impact of those cuts is far greater than the benefits of the
money that it is proposing to put in. This year alone it is another
$2.8 billion in cuts to the Canada health and social transfer, and it is
crowing about $300 million that it is going to put into health care
over a three year period.
Let us put things in perspective. For every $1 the government is
putting back in this year it is going to take $10 out. I do not think
that is much of a help to ordinary Canadians.
A lot of ordinary Canadians are going to say this is nothing but
pre-election flimflammery. They have every right to be cynical
about what the government is doing and they really wonder what
the exercise or what the purpose of a budget is. If it is not to tell the
complete story then what exactly is the government doing?
Obviously it is trying to put the best possible face on a very bad
situation.
One of the concerns I have is that over the three and a half years
we have been here our party has railed away day after day on the
problem of the deficit. I want to give the government some credit
here. The government is finally taking the deficit situation
seriously. After nine years that we have pounded away about the
deficit, it has become an issue. I would like to suggest that perhaps
the Reform Party can take a bit of credit for raising that issue and
making it a big issue. I applaud the government for finally
recognizing that it is important. It has taken a while but the
message has gone through.
Where we disagree completely with the government on its
approach to the deficit is in how it has lowered it. The government
has taken a completely different approach than our party would
have taken. I want to expand on that for a moment.
The government has raised revenues. It has raised taxes, raised
revenues, and it has used that money in a couple of different ways.
It has used it partially to reduce the deficit and it has used it
partially to maintain a government that is far too big, far too
wasteful, far to inefficient; a government that still has all kinds of
pools of money to give out to special interests, to business groups
and to many big businesses like Bombardier. The government has
used the money to curry favour with regional interests. It has used
it in a number of ways that are not very efficient and do not
contribute to the overall betterment of the Canadian people and the
Canadian economy.
That is one of the big differences between what the government
does and how the Reform Party would handle this situation. The
government says that it thinks it is okay to gradually reduce its
spending until it has a government of around $107 billion or
somewhere around there. We say it is much better to reduce the size
of government down to about $94 billion and to turn the savings
back to Canadians. In other words, the government has
continuously raised revenues up, and that has come from only one
place, from the pockets of ordinary Canadians. Meanwhile
Canadians' incomes have fallen.
We say it is time to reverse that trend. We would make
government smaller and give the benefits back to ordinary
Canadians in the form of a $15 billion tax relief package. It would
amount to $2,000 for the average family of four by the year 2000. I
will go into that in more detail in a moment.
However, there is another area where we are critical of the
government. We are critical of the government in so far as when it
has reduced spending it has reduced it by cutting transfers to the
provinces.
We came here three and a half years ago, coming out of an
election campaign where the Reform Party proposed to balance the
budget over a three year period. We called it zero in three. In that
package we outlined a number of spending reductions. We said
because Canadians have made it very clear that health care is a
priority for them, we would preserve health care spending and
higher education spending, but that just about everything else
would have to be looked at. In that plan we were able to come up
with enough cuts that we would be able to balance the budget over
a three year period.
When we were proposing those things the government members
across the way at that time during the election campaign pilloried
the Reform Party despite the fact that we were going to save health
care and save higher education. What did they turn around and do?
They proceeded to cut health care far more dramatically than
anything anybody in the provinces ever proposed. We proposed to
save it; they cut it by billions and billions of dollars. There are
hospitals closed around the country today due to what the Liberals
did after they said they would not do it.
8363
(1130 )
In the election campaign they went around the country telling
people they were going to be the defenders of medicare. I do not
think there is anybody who would buy that line today. The finance
minister has served as the Dr. Kevorkian of health care in this
country. He has pulled the plug on health care in many, many
regions of the country. I hope the Liberals will pay the price for
that.
Cutting transfers to the provinces is the wrong way to cut
spending. We say that it is much better to look at your own house
first. When you do that then you have the moral authority, you have
exercised leadership and people are much more willing to accept
cuts at their level if you have already demonstrated that you are
willing to accept cuts at your own level.
In order to get its spending in line the government cut defence. It
has cut that department by about $3 billion since it has been in
power. Defence has been the whipping boy of successive
governments for a long time and the cuts have to stop.
When we add up the cuts the government has made to transfers
to the provinces which amount to about $7.5 billion, and the cuts
which it has made to defence which are about $3 billion, it amounts
to $10.5 billion. It has only cut $17 billion in total. The other $6.5
billion has come from cuts to its own administration.
If we add that to the increase in revenues which the government
has brought in, which amount to about $28 billion and which
include user fees and other revenues, this indicates that only about
5 per cent of the overall improvement in the bottom line is due to
cuts in its own backyard. It has only cut itself by 5 per cent.
Taxpayers have taken a major hit. Their pocketbooks are empty
because of what the government has done. The provinces have
taken a major hit. The people in defence have taken a major hit. But
only 5 per cent of the improvement in the bottom line is due to cuts
that the Liberals over there have taken.
One of the most egregious examples is the cementing in place of
the MP pension plan that Liberal members were thrilled to engage
in about two years ago. Now they turn around and say: ``We are
going to go after seniors and all the rest of the people who are
coming up through the ranks and paying into the Canada pension
plan by raising their premiums by 70 per cent''.
It is typical of what has happened in this budget. It is typical of
what has happened in the past. Liberal members pad their own
pockets first and then ensure that their way is paid for by higher
premiums and higher taxes from ordinary hard working Canadians.
This budget is a fudge it budget. It has not told the complete
story about what is going on in the country. The government has
proven that it is disconnected from what is going on in the country.
The government has proven it does not understand the pain which
ordinary Canadians are feeling. The government has completely
broken its promise on jobs. It has left the young people of the
country out in the cold. Youth unemployment stands at 17 per cent.
There is a better way. The Reform Party will provide people with
a better way through lower taxes, smaller government and a
reinvestment in social programs. I hope that Canadians punish the
government in the next election for what it has done.
Mr. Paul Szabo (Mississauga South, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, the
Reform Party continues to talk about how Canadians feel.
I wonder if the Reform Party has considered how the disabled
feel about this budget. Their benefits have been enhanced. I wonder
if it has thought about how students feel about the expanded tuition
credits and deductions they are going to get. I wonder if it has
thought about how seniors feel now that there is in place a seniors
benefit program and amendments to the CPP which will guarantee
pensions and disability benefits. I wonder if it has thought about
how Canadian parents feel about the enriched child tax benefit.
(1135 )
Has Reform thought of how the Canadian tourist industry feels
about the significant injection of funds, or about how the
technological industry in Canada feels? How about the agricultural
sector? How about the youth strategy, the jobs and opportunities?
These are also Canadians and they understand that the government
has delivered a budget of hope.
The member spent a lot of time dealing with health care and how
awful it is. Let me talk about what has happened with health care in
my province of Ontario. The CHST was decreased by two and half
per cent of provincial revenues which is far less than what we cut
our own spending by. What happened is that the Ontario
government then proceeded with a 30 per cent tax increase. The
National Forum on Health has stated that the problem with our
health system is not money itself but how the money is spent.
My question has to do with the Canada pension plan. I would
like the member to answer some questions for the House and
Canadians. Do the Canada pension plan collections received by the
government reduce the deficit? Do individuals, corporations and
self-employed people pay less tax because they are paying a little
more in CPP?
If the answers to those questions are what they should be, then
the member will also agree that the government deficit increases as
a result of the CPP increase in premiums because of lower tax
revenue from individuals, corporations and self-employed people.
The Reform Party has said that CPP increases are a tax grab, but
8364
they are actually reducing the government's revenues and
increasing the deficit.
Mr. Solberg: Mr. Speaker, there are a lot of different issues
there. I hope the hon. member will forgive me if I do not get to all
of them.
He touched on students. I will try to answer the member's
questions about what this budget does for students. As I said
before, this budget is not remarkable only for what is in it but also
for what is not in it. The hon. member forgot to mention that the
government has already cut seven and a half billion dollars in the
health and social transfer. Transfers for education have been
dramatically reduced by this government. When the hon. member
says that the government has thrown a bone to students, he has
forgotten to say that it already took about 10 bones away. He should
mention that in fairness.
The same thing applies to the disabled. There have been billions
of dollars in cuts to health care. The disabled more than any other
group rely on health care. In fairness he should point that out. We
do not have a problem with the government contributing more
money toward the disabled; that is not a problem. But he should in
fairness point out that the government has dramatically reduced
transfers to the disabled.
With respect to the child tax credit, we have no problem with
money going into programs for poor people in this country. That is
a good idea. We have no problem with that. Our point is that if you
keep raising taxes and hurting people, poor people in particular
who have the least income and cannot afford tax increases, then
you are undoing any good you could possibly do by giving them
more money through a program to alleviate child poverty.
With respect to technology, if you raise taxes through the roof,
which is what this government has done, and then you throw people
a bone in a pre-election budget, that is superficial. People
understand exactly what the government has done in the past.
Those cuts are still hitting home today. So let us not be misled.
What was in the budget with respect to agriculture? I did not hear
anything. Was there anything? There was nothing in there, despite
the fact that we have tremendous transportation problems in the
west and we have a wheat board which many people would argue is
completely dysfunctional. So let us not suggest there was
something in there when there was not.
With respect to youth, I simply must say when the member talks
about a youth strategy, what people really want are jobs. This
country has a 17 per cent youth unemployment rate. It is
horrendous especially considering the government ran on a
promise of jobs, jobs, jobs. We do not need more programs, what
we need are more jobs.
(1140 )
Finally with respect to CPP-
Mr. O'Reilly: Mr. Speaker, on a point of order.
I respect the views of the hon. member for Medicine Hat but that
is the third time he has used the term ``jobs, jobs, jobs'' which was
Mr. Mulroney's statement.
The Deputy Speaker: That will not come out of the time of the
hon. member for Medicine Hat.
Mr. Solberg: Mr. Speaker, Liberal, Tory, same old story.
With respect to the CPP, I simply must point out that the finance
department itself has called the premiums on CPP a payroll tax.
Therefore it is a payroll tax and we must not mislead Canadians by
suggesting that somehow this is an investment which is what I
think my friend across the way wants people to believe.
In fact if it were an investment, it would be the worst possible
investment I have ever heard of in my life: premiums go up 70 per
cent and there is a 10 per cent decrease in the pension. How in the
world can members across the way call that an investment? If it is
an investment, it is a Liberal investment and the worst possible one
I have ever heard of.
Mr. Len Taylor (The Battlefords-Meadow Lake, NDP): Mr.
Speaker, I have a comment and a question for the member for
Medicine Hat generally on the debate yesterday and today.
I see a tremendous circus spectacle being undertaken here.
Jugglers from all sides of the House are throwing brightly coloured
balls into the air, diverting the attention of Canadians from what is
really happening behind them. The political agenda of both the
government and the Reform Party is being ignored while the public
watches all these coloured balls but Canadians see through this.
They are not watching the balls in the air any more. They are
concerned about what is happening behind the jugglers.
We see today in particular the Reform Party's finance critic
talking about jobs and what would happen under the budget. I have
to accept all of the critical words the member for Medicine Hat has
put out with regard to the government's record on jobs. The
government's record is abysmal in this regard and the government
knows it.
The member for Medicine Hat also knows that the program
which created no job creation in this country is the same type of
program he would advocate were he the finance minister. There
would be additional cutbacks in the public service and tax breaks to
the large corporations which have not produced any additional jobs
in this country.
I would like the member for Medicine Hat, who is Reform's
finance critic, to comment on some of the numbers that have come
out of the budget, in particular one set of numbers. In 1993, the last
year of the Mulroney government, 5,250 taxpayers earning over
8365
$70,000 a year paid no taxes. Under the current government there
has been a 400 per cent increase in that 21,270 Canadians who earn
$70,000 a year or more paid no taxes. There are more Canadians
paying less taxes or no taxes-
The Deputy Speaker: The hon. member's time will be up in one
minute and eleven seconds.
Mr. Solberg: Mr. Speaker, I have the same response to my hon.
friend. The Reform Party is an advocate of a much simpler taxation
system that ensures everybody pays taxes. In fact we have been at
the forefront of the debate in advocating a flat tax system and
would certainly invite my hon. friend and others to contribute to
that debate. It is wrong for people to escape paying taxes in this
country if indeed they have an income, or in the case of
corporations if they are making a profit. That would be the short
answer.
The other point I would make to my hon. friend is we believe
that subsidizing businesses by giving them taxpayers' money is
equally wrong. That is something my friends across the way in the
Liberal Party have been guilty of for a long time.
(1145 )
The most blatant example of that was recently when they gave
their friends at Bombardier hundreds of millions of dollars in
subsidies. I note in the budget that another $250 million has been
set aside for precisely that. They should be ashamed of that
approach to job creation because it only creates jobs for their
corporate buddies in corporate Canada.
Mr. Geoff Regan (Halifax West, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, I am
splitting my time with the hon. member for Saint-Denis.
With this, our fourth budget, we begin to build the future while
recognizing we are still constrained by the past. As we head into
the new millennium, we are continuing to restore Canada's fiscal
health. We are continuing to invest in immediate jobs and growth.
We are continuing to invest in job creation and growth in the long
run and we are continuing to invest in a stronger society.
From the beginning our government has struggled under the
weight of massive debt; like a $500 billion ball and chain, the debt
prevented us from going where we wanted.
Today we are by no means unchained. The only thing we spend
more on than interest is transfers. We spend more on interest on the
debt than on everything else combined, excluding transfers. So
debt remains a problem. Even when the annual deficit has gone
down to zero the ball and chain of debt will remain until we pay off
our enormous loan.
As the economy grows and the debt declines we will be able to
move more and more freely. So no, we are not unchained but our
deficit is lower than it has been in 15 years. We have restored
international confidence in our fiscal management of the country.
We have restored our fiscal sovereignty. We have restored interest
rate sanity and our load is beginning to lighten. We can now begin
to move beyond securing, stabilizing and sustaining, toward
striving for a stronger society, toward seizing our destiny in the
21st century.
There are those who say this is simply an election budget, that
we are not showing our true colours, that our new spendings on
jobs, health care and poor children are just short term election
ploys. To them I say look at the numbers. They all add up and we
are still ahead of our fiscal targets. If we could not sustain these
programs and this new spending, would that be so? To them I say
look at the markets. Our interest rates are a full two and a quarter
percentage points below the U.S. and the dollar is staying strong.
When did that last happen? If we could not sustain this spending,
would that be so?
As we begin to shed the mantle of heavy debt, our true colours
are beginning to shine through. But let us not forget that for the
parties of the right, not just the Reform Party but also the
Conservative Party, we have not cut quickly enough. The
Conservative leader demanded that we clean up the mess his
government left behind. He wanted us to cut deeper. He wanted us
to cut faster. But our government has taken a more balanced
approach.
From the beginning, even as we cut many areas of government to
meet our deficit targets, we invested what we could in key
Canadian priorities. We cut our own government the most and we
cut our transfers for social programs the least. As we gain greater
fiscal freedom we are continuing to invest in those priorities.
With this, our fourth budget, we are continuing to invest in
immediate jobs and growth. Jobs and growth have been our number
one priority from the start; 790,000 new jobs since we started is
nothing to sneeze at but it is not nearly enough.
We are extending the Canadian infrastructure works program
which has created jobs for 100,000 Canadians.
(1150)
We increased funding for youth employment, including doubling
assistance for summer jobs. We are investing $15 million per year
more on promoting tourism. That is an investment that will help to
draw people to the rugged rocks of Peggy's Cove and the beautiful
beaches of Queensland and Hubbards.
We are continuing to invest in job creation and growth in the
long run. We are establishing the Canada Foundation for
Innovation, an $800 million foundation to support research
infrastructure especially in health, environment, science and
engineering.
8366
In the short run, this means jobs for those who will design and
build these new and expanding research facilities. It also means
more jobs at universities and hospitals in places like Halifax. In
the long run, the research this money supports is key to competing
in the global race for jobs in the 21st century.
As we all know, a better education means a better job. We are
helping students and their parents cope with the rising cost of
education. We are improving the student loan system and
enhancing the education credit. We are continuing to invest in a
stronger society.
When we began, our indebtedness was threatening the very
future of our social programs. Now we are investing $300 million
over the next three years to support key recommendations of the
national forum on health. Now we are allocating $600 million in
new funds for the child tax benefit to reduce child poverty. Now we
are allocating $230 million over 3 years to assist Canadian with
disabilities.
When we began, Canadians had to marshal a great national will
to keep Canada from going broke, to secure our social programs
and to make them sustainable. Now we need to begin to marshal
that same will to build a Canada that works for everyone. Now we
need to strengthen our society to make sure Canada can stride
unshackled toward its destiny in the 21st century.
With this budget we turn the page. With this budget we take the
first steps together on a great new journey.
Mr. Len Taylor (The Battlefords-Meadow Lake, NDP): Mr.
Speaker, I have a couple of questions for the member from Nova
Scotia. He has accepted the premise of the budget about improving
the economy and moving us forward. In particular, I want to talk
about the children of the working poor, many of whom I know live
in Nova Scotia and for whom Nova Scotians are looking to the
member for representation.
This morning in a news conference in Ottawa on Parliament Hill,
the federal New Democratic Party leader Alexa McDonough urged
the federal government to reverse plans hidden in the budget from
Tuesday that will cut benefits for some 288,000 children of
working poor in this country.
She released some evidence, including copies of newspaper
clippings from Toronto yesterday, that women living in the Toronto
area were shocked to find out that they will get less money under
the new program once it is brought into place than they were
getting to date.
It is noted that the combined working income supplement and
the child tax benefit for families with one child will be $1,625
under the new proposal instead of the $1,770 that they are getting
today. This represents a 20 per cent cut in benefits for roughly 40
per cent of those estimated to be Canada's working poor families.
I want to ask the member whether he believes that this
information is correct. If it is, would he work to help change the
direction that is being taken by the government with regard to this
part of the budget?
(1155 )
My second question deals with the lack of attention that the
budget paid to the goods and services tax. The House had a major
debate here over the harmonization of the GST for three of the four
Atlantic provinces. I was not present to hear comments from the
hon. member from the Halifax area with regard to the
harmonization of the GST.
I see that the Senate is about to hold hearings in Atlantic Canada,
something the House of Commons and the government chose not to
do. Therefore I am wondering if the member would appear before
the Senate committee touring Atlantic Canada and what he would
say.
Mr. Regan: Mr. Speaker, I want to thank the member for The
Battlefords-Meadow Lake for his question. I always enjoy
hearing questions from this hon. member because he holds the seat
that my grandfather, Jack Harrison, held many years ago and we
have once in a while had exchanges in the House and it has always
been a pleasure to discuss important issues with him.
Since I came to this House in 1993 I have worked, as have many
of my colleagues, on issues relating to child poverty. It has been an
issue of priority for me for many years, long before I came to this
House, as some members will know.
When I hear the hon. member say that this is going to make
people worse off, we have had a look at the numbers. The fact is no
one will be worse off than they are under the present system. Here
are the numbers, here are the facts. The maximum benefit will be
increased from $500 per family to $605 for the first child, $405 for
the second child and $330 for each additional child. Benefits will
continue to be phased in based on family earned income over
$3,750, not a very high threshold, and reduced as family income
exceeds $20,921.
This is a very important measure in the right direction. We have
to go on. I do not say this is enough. I do not begin to say that we
are investing in this budget all that we need to do in the long run to
solve the problem long term of child poverty, but we are beginning
to see the light at the end of the tunnel. We are beginning to make a
very important investment. We are showing that this is the
direction we want to take on this important national challenge of
fighting child poverty.
The member raised the question of the GST and the HST. The
changes to the GST and HST in Nova Scotia are very important and
very valuable in many ways. They are not perfect. I have never
seen a change in taxation that was, unless it is actually eliminated.
8367
We would love to be able to do that. However, when we are paying
$42 billion-
The Deputy Speaker: I am sorry, but the hon. member's time
has expired.
Mrs. Eleni Bakopanos (Saint-Denis, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, what
is a budget, we may ask. It is a blueprint for action.
Over the past three years our budgets have served as a road map
for Canadians, telling them what lies ahead and forging a path to
the 21st century.
When we first received our map over three years ago the roads
had been washed out in my opinion. We were heading down the
road of economic destruction and social inequity. Nine years of
failing to meet the targets by the Conservatives had taken their toll.
In 1993 Canadians gave this government their overwhelming
support to draft a new economic road map. We set about restoring
public confidence by providing good government and creating a
climate for putting more Canadians back to work.
[Translation]
Our fourth budget is our latest contribution to turn around the
nightmarish economic and fiscal situation inherited from the
previous administration. In January 1994, the deficit was $42
billion, and our debt load had jeopardized the future of our social
measures. It is no wonder that so many Canadians lost hope. But
four Liberal budgets have put us back on track.
[English]
We have made progress. Our fiscal policy of restraint in
government spending and program review over three previous
budgets is today showing tangible results.
Let us make no mistake. Jobs and growth as well as preserving
our health and social programs have been a priority of this
government from the very beginning.
(1200 )
Since coming into office, we have initiated a series of actions to
stimulate immediate job creation. We have worked in collaboration
with municipal and provincial governments, even Quebec, in an
effort to improve the well-being of all Canadians. We took
immediate action. We introduced the infrastructure program which
was a success from coast to coast and, for that reason, we have
decided to reintroduce it.
In my riding of Saint-Denis, one of the biggest infrastructure
programs was launched to renovate Jarry Tennis Stadium and
thereby ensure that the international tennis tournament remains in
Montreal. In the case of my riding, I have seen tangible evidence of
Canadian tax dollars working to improve the well-being of my
constituents.
[Translation]
In 1996 alone, more than $3.5 million has been invested in the
riding of Saint-Denis by various ministers and state secretariats.
With these subsidies, organizations were able to carry out many
projects, bettering the lives of our fellow citizens and creating
more than 50 permanent jobs and nearly 80 summer jobs.
Several non-governmental organizations, including La
Jarnigoine literacy centre in Villeray and the recreational and
educational and heritage activities association, have received
federal subsidies. Moisson Montréal, and its affiliate Renaissance
Montréal, were also able to further their objectives in providing the
most disadvantaged with either food or clothing at a very low cost.
One of the priorities I set for myself when I ran in the last
election was to ensure a better future for young people in Saint-Denis.
[English]
I agree wholeheartedly with the Minister of Finance who said in
his budget speech this week: ``Let us recognize that Canada's
greatest natural resources do not lie buried deep in the ground but
in the skills and talents of those who walk on it''.
[Translation]
The youth employment strategy announced last week by the
Minister of Human Resources Development will help young people
achieve their goals by providing them with the necessary tools.
Some $60 million of the amount earmarked in the 1996 budget
was used to double the number of student summer jobs, which
climbed to 60,000 in the summer of 1996.
[English]
New internship programs in partnership with the private sector
will be put in place to allow young Canadians to gain work
experience, a first job. How many times have we heard frustrated
graduates say: ``I have the degree, now if I could only get some job
experience''. We have given them that opportunity.
Total federal spending on youth employment programs,
including Youth Services Canada, Youth Internship Canada and
Student Connections, over three years, 1996 to 1999, will be about
$1 billion, a substantial commitment to Canada's future leaders.
[Translation]
Several organizations in the riding of Saint-Denis have already
been able to hire under the summer career placement program,
including the Coopérative fédérée du Québec, the Copains de
Saint-Simon, Résidence Louvain and Cap du College de
Bois-de-Boulogne.
8368
In addition, we have carried out in Saint-Denis four Youth
Service Canada projects, providing employment for 63 young
people.
[English]
I will mention two examples today, the first one is the Octave
Cremazie project. Fifteen young people who had never had any
opportunities are now working in cleaning the environment in one
sector of my riding. The other example is the Park Extension Youth
Organization. We gave these kids their first opportunity to work
and have some experience in working with a team. It was the first
time that it had ever been done in one of the poorest districts in all
of Canada.
[Translation]
The Liberal government's fourth budget will also help students
and their parents deal with the increased cost of higher education,
through three important measures: the amount on which the
education tax credit is based will be doubled, the student loans
program will be improved by providing a longer payment period
for students, and the ceiling on annual contributions to an
educational savings plan will be doubled. Once all these measures
are in place, they will increase by $275 million per year tax
assistance to students and their families.
I think this is good news to the students of Collège de
Bois-de-Boulogne and throughout the province of Quebec. At a
time when the unemployment rate for young people is close to 20
per cent in Quebec, it is inappropriate for provincial authorities to
criticize any attempt by the federal government to improve the
situation.
[English]
Small and medium size businesses with fewer than 15
employees account for approximately 42 per cent of all private
sector employment. They have generated between 70 per cent and
80 per cent of all new jobs in Canada over the past three years. In
Saint-Denis, small and medium size businesses dominate the
industrial sector.
(1205)
Last month I organized an information seminar for these
entrepreneurs. Despite the snowstorm, nearly 100 business people
were present. Many were impressed with the gamut of services
which have been introduced by the Minister of Industry and by the
Secretary of State for the Federal Office of Regional Development.
We often hear those same entrepreneurs complaining about the
amount of paperwork they have to complete. The 1997 budget,
along with the Minister of National Revenue, addressed these
concerns. For example, the requirement to file monthly payroll
deductions will be eliminated for small businesses with a perfect
compliance record. They will now be permitted to file quarterly.
This measure has the potential of benefiting up to 650,000 small
businesses.
In addition, the budget proposes to raise the ceiling on the Small
Business Loans Act from $12 billion to $14 billion, providing
additional borrowing assistance for fixed assets. Budgets are not
just numbers. They speak of people's futures, their economic,
social and mental well-being.
To illustrate the important role of government in people's lives I
wish to quote a great Canadian born economist, John Kenneth
Galbraith. He said: ``There must be, most of all, an effective safety
net-individual and family support-for those who live on the
lower edges of the system or below. This is humanely essential.
This is also necessary for human freedom. Nothing sets such stern
limits on the liberty of the citizen as the total absence of money''.
Let us not forget that 1997 is the international year for the
eradication of poverty. We have made a commitment to that effect
to the poor children and families of the country. The measures
introduced in the budget are important steps toward this goal. But
that is only the beginning. We must do more. We are now at the
crossroads of our road map.
[Translation]
As of July 1998, the federal contribution for children will go up
from $5.1 billion to $6 billion. The Canada child tax benefit will
provide increased support to one million Canadian families, and
their children.
The two levels of governments made a commitment to create a
new national child tax benefit program, which would be based on
the Canada child tax benefit.
We did our share and I hope the provinces, including the
separatist government in Quebec, will do theirs, so that as much
money as possible is available to reduce child poverty.
[English]
The road has been a difficult one. We can all attest to that. All
members of the House, on both sides, felt the suffering and loss of
hope which many families and young people have endured these
past few years. We have made many difficult decisions in the past
three years, but we had few choices. Thus we have strived once
again with this budget to provide a road map which will better the
quality of life of all Canadians as we approach a new millennium; a
map which will lead us to eliminate social and economic
inequalities, a map that guarantees educational and work
opportunities for our youth-
The Deputy Speaker: I am sorry to interrupt the hon. member
but her time has expired.
Mr. Ray Speaker (Lethbridge, Ref.): Mr. Speaker, thank you
for the opportunity to make a comment and also to put a question to
the hon. member for Saint-Denis.
8369
She stated that measures in the budget are important. I certainly
understand that comment and the arguments she has made to
support that position.
The question I would like to ask the hon. member relates to a
motion which was passed in the House of Commons on December
11, 1995, which gave some direction to the House. Has the
government or she as a member of the Liberal government taken
that motion into consideration in terms of support for the measures
that are strong in this budget.
Just to remind the House, the wording of the resolution was:
Whereas the people of Quebec have expressed the desire for recognition of
Quebec's distinct society:
(2) the House recognize that Quebec's distinct society includes its
French-speaking majority, unique culture and civil law traditions;
(3) the House undertake to be guided by this reality;
That is the operative part and the direction to this House and the
item I would like the hon. member to comment on.
Third, I would like her to comment on this portion as well:
-the House encourage all components of the legislative-branches of government
to take note of this recognition and be guided in their conduct accordingly.
(1210 )
Are we being guided?
The Prime Minister reinforced the direction to this House by
saying: ``Once it is passed this resolution will have an impact on
how legislation is passed in the House of Commons''. I would think
that should apply to budgets as well. ``I remind Canadians that the
legislative branch will be bound by this resolution, as will be the
executive branch. This is a real dynamic recognition recorded in
the very heart of our country's government''.
Today in an earlier ruling by the Speaker it was felt that this
procedure did not have significance.
There was a directive of the House. We are talking about the
budget of the country which is the framework on which many other
decisions are made. Does the motion we passed, supported
wholeheartedly by the government, have any affect on the budget?
Mrs. Bakopanos: Mr. Speaker, I thank the hon. member for his
question. On this side of the House we make no distinction between
different parts of the country. As far as we are concerned the budget
is for all Canadians. The same measures apply across the country.
As I said at the end of my speech, we want to ensure that all
Canadians are treated equally by the government. Throughout our
three-year mandate we have addressed areas where there are
inequities.
Mr. Len Taylor (The Battlefords-Meadow Lake, NDP): Mr.
Speaker, this question is a follow-up to my question to the member
from Halifax. It is with regard to the working income supplement
and the child tax benefit for families. I believe the member who
just spoke heard what I had to say on that issue.
The National Council of Welfare has concluded that the child tax
benefit will actually cost tens of thousands of families with one
child more than $500 over two years. Yesterday the finance
minister told the Toronto Star that families with one child will
receive less money from Ottawa, and the member for
Elgin-Norfolk also told the Toronto Star yesterday that he is not
happy with this situation and that he would try to get it fixed.
Last year the budget set out a scheme for providing additional
funds to families of the working poor. This budget has changed that
formula dramatically and has cancelled the increase for families
from last year. Because it is now child based rather than family
based, it will result in a 20 per cent cut in benefits to 288,000 poor
children or roughly 40 per cent of the poor living in Canada.
Will the member for Saint-Denis also work to correct this
deficiency in the system?
Mrs. Bakopanos: Mr. Speaker, I thank the hon. member for his
question but I will repeat what other hon. members have said.
These budget measures will result in all children being better off
than they were three years ago. I find it kind of unusual that the
hon. member is not applauding some of the efforts outlined in the
budget.
The NDP should be applauding some of the measures that have
been introduced. They are measures to ensure a better future for
Canada's children.
[Translation]
Mr. Richard Bélisle (La Prairie, BQ): Mr. Speaker, this fourth
budget brought down last Tuesday in the House by the Minister of
Finance is election minded and centralist.
It is centralist because the areas it addresses are all, without
exception, provincial in jurisdiction: literacy, tax benefits for
children, tourism, higher eduction, students, the disabled, health
and medical expenses.
It is election minded because it consists of a scattering of timid
measures and a few million dollars tossed out to attract groups that
are generally anti-Liberal.
Let us take the example of tourism, in which they will invest $15
million annually. As Alain Dubuc pointed out yesterday morning in
the editorial in La Presse, the interest alone on the federal debt is
over $125 million daily.
8370
(1215)
Seventy million dollars will be spent this year on the child tax
benefit, less than the cost of servicing the debt for 17 hours,
corresponding to 53 cents per child per week. There will be a 10
cent reduction in UI premiums for every $100 of insurable
earnings.
In addition, the Farm Credit Corporation will receive $50
million to support diversification in rural Canada, and $10 million
in funding will be provided to help connect rural areas to the new
information highway.
You will observe that all these areas come under provincial
jurisdiction or are areas in which Quebec has been trying to defend
its jurisdiction for years, with no success, given Liberal policy.
The Liberals' strategy could not be clearer. After cutting
transfers to the provinces by several billion dollars and forcing
them to struggle with increased deficits and, in the case of Quebec,
to manage downsizing in education and health, with all that that
represents in terms of management of collective agreements and
workforce reduction, the federal government is tossing a few
scraps the way of the provinces to increase its visibility in the
months leading up to the election.
This budget is Machiavellian, because it leaves the dirty work of
cutting back program spending to the provinces. Because, year
after year, the federal government has dipped into the $5 billion
surplus in the unemployment insurance fund, deficit reduction is
also supported by employers, for whom it is a sort of payroll tax in
disguise, and by the workers, for whom it represents a hindrance to
employment. The unemployed who are still searching for
employment are 1.5 million strong, and there are another 1.5
million who are no longer in the unemployment statistics, having
given up hope of finding a job.
The tax burden has increased by $22 billion in four years. Over
that time, expenditures have decreased by $14 billion, over half of
that the result of decreased transfer payments to the provinces.
The Minister of Finance is concealing his true margin of
manoeuvrability from us. It is impossible for his deficit to decrease
by only $2 billion next year, when it has already gone down close to
$10 billion this year. The minister is hiding several billion dollars
up his sleeve, just for the purpose of justifying his approach to
cutting the deficit.
There is nothing for employment, nothing for the battle against
poverty. The government will earmark $800 million for the
creation of a Canadian foundation for innovation. As if by chance,
this amount of $800 million comes from transfer payments to the
provinces, which are precisely $800 million less than what was
forecast for 1997-98 in the 1996 budget, essentially due to an
improved economic situation.
This foundation duplicates services already provided by the
provinces. Creating a new foundation instead of reinforcing
existing research bodies would give the Liberals a chance to put in
their own people, people who will act as a kind of liaison in
connection with future appointments and fundraising for the
Liberal campaign, now the election is only months away.
There is no provision for compensating the Quebec government
for harmonizing the GST in 1991, while the maritimes will be
entitled to $1 billion in return for doing what Quebec did six years
ago, without any compensation at all.
The minister is reactivating some good news that was announced
a few months ago, and prefers to remains silent on the cuts that will
kick in this year and were included in last year's budget.
Instead of reducing duplication and overlap, the federal
government increases these as well as the inefficiencies for which
it has been criticized by the Bloc Quebecois for the past four years.
However, there may well be no more duplication and overlap in the
future.
(1220)
As transfers to the provinces are reduced, the provinces will have
to hand over entire components of their mission to the federal
government. That is not how the provinces and Quebec taxpayers
would like to see duplication and overlap eliminated.
The 1997 budget elbows the provinces aside even more, so there
will be more programs flaunting the maple leaf. What matters most
to the government on the eve of an election is the visibility of the
maple leaf on printed matter sent to Quebec and Canadian
households between now and June 9, and the government is even
happier if this mailing perhaps includes a cheque.
Notwithstanding the increase in tax revenues over the past four
years, the reduction in transfer payments to the provinces and the
appropriation of the unemployment insurance fund, the minister
does not expect his deficit to drop by more than $2 billion next
year. The minister therefore retains considerable flexibility, and the
measures to deal with unemployment and poverty are minimal,
compared with the actual spending capacity of the federal treasury.
They could even forecast a zero deficit for the year 2000 or even
1999.
The Bloc Quebecois estimates that today, the Minister of
Finance has about $8 billion to use as he sees fit. The minister is a
year ahead of schedule in his fight against the deficit. If he refuses
to disclose the real numbers, it is because he wants to prevent any
action by the provinces, community groups and unions which
would certainly ask him to refinance social transfers to the
provinces.
If we look at how the budget has changed in the past four years,
we see that 52 per cent of the $14.2 billion reduction in federal
government spending involves transfers to other levels of
government, primarily the provinces. Only 21.1 per cent, or one
dollar in
8371
every five, of this reduction comes from direct government
expenditures.
The Minister of Finance says he did not raise taxes in his 1997
budget. Since the Liberals have been in power, personal income
taxes have continued to increase and at a rate greater than the GDP
year in and year out. This increase in the personal tax burden
especially on the middle class is not the result of a review of the tax
system aimed at improving tax equity. Not at all. It is the result of
several subtle increases, such as the non indexation of the tax and
tax credit tables, causing individual income tax to rise every year in
Canada.
The minister talks of an improvement in the child tax benefit,
which will not have a real impact until 1998, thus after the election.
Will the Liberals give the child tax benefit the same treatment they
gave the promises on the national child care system they promised
in the last election?
After impoverishing their parents through massive cuts to social
transfers and unemployment insurance, will the Liberal
government in a gesture of cynicism ease the lives of the children
of these families?
Family policy and the fight against poverty are provincial
matters. The continued and even expanded federal intrusion into
areas of provincial jurisdiction is not acceptable and hampers the
implementation of coherent policy in Quebec. While ministers
Harel and Marois in Quebec are struggling to find the millions
required to help children, families and the jobless, the federal
finance minister is trying to develop a family policy, an area that
does not come under the responsibility of the federal government
and for which it does not have the necessary expertise, since this
has traditionally been a provincial jurisdiction, in Quebec and in
the other provinces.
Looking at this cynical and centralizing budget, one stops
wondering why a majority of Quebecers long for a sovereign
Quebec. It is to finally be free from this perpetual state of
confusion where the level of government that controls the purse
strings does not know what the needs are and does not have the
human resources to serve a public which is, at any rate, far away.
Leading anti-poverty organizations estimate that at least $2
billion more would be required every year to put up a serious fight
against poverty. But starting in 1998, the government will be
spending only $850 million per year on the fight against poverty.
This is therefore not nearly enough, especially since the federal
government has considerably impoverished the provinces.
(1225)
It has been announced that unemployment insurance premiums
will be reduced by 10 cents starting January 1, 1998. This is an
announcement that is normally made in November. Knowing him
as we do, we can expect the Minister of Finance to announce this
good news twice. In addition, this reduction is much smaller than
what employers' associations have asked for and what it should
have been, given the huge surpluses in the unemployment
insurance fund.
The Bloc Quebecois asks that the government substantially
reduce UI premium rates and improve the employment insurance
program, which has become too restrictive and is, unfortunately,
forcing onto welfare people who, as job seekers, should continue to
receive benefits.
The accumulated surplus is large enough to allow eligibility
rules to be relaxed and the premium rates to be reduced even
further. Any annual surplus is a hidden tax paid by employers and
employees. A 10 cent reduction of the 1998 premium amounts to
$700 million. With a $5 billion surplus forecast for 1998, it should
be possible to reduce the premium rate by 70 cents. The $15 billion
surplus accumulated by the end of 1998 should even translate into a
tax break, since it is in fact an employment tax of $2.10 for one
year.
One can see the feeble attempt made by the Minister of Finance
to help job creation. The minister claims that serious studies
estimate at somewhere between $10 billion and $15 billion the
reserve required to prevent another recession. Just look at what will
happen when the next recession occurs. Since the reserve is already
being used to reduce the deficit, the minister will suddenly and
drastically increase the premium rate, because the reserve will have
disappeared.
In November, the Bloc Quebecois released a comprehensive
study on corporate taxation, so as to make an honest and objective
contribution to the debate and to provide suggestions to the
minister, who is often bereft of ideas.
Today, it is obvious that the 1997 Estimates include no changes
to corporate taxes. There is no tax measure to promote job creation.
The minister is clearly showing that he did not want to change the
corporate tax system to promote employment. The minister's
inaction regarding the corporate tax issue reflects his inability to
adjust to the current economic context and to make job creation his
top priority.
In conclusion, I feel the minister has turned a deaf ear to the Bloc
Quebecois' recommendations regarding obsolete tax deductions
for business. Obsolete tax shelters and deductions should be
replaced by a tax system designed to promote employment. But
nothing of the sort was done. The Bloc Quebecois suggested using
up to $3 billion in ineffective tax deductions to create jobs instead.
Given the current economic context, job creation should be the
main thrust of the corporate tax policy. However, under the budget,
8372
corporate tax revenues will only fluctuate by $205 million, of
which $175 million is the result of a mere accounting exercise.
The only other measure affecting corporate taxation is the
decision to extend the temporary tax on large deposit taking
institutions. This represents $25 million. Given the sky-high profits
made by Canada's major banks, it is a very small contribution on
their part to the community's well-being.
Mrs. Eleni Bakopanos (Saint-Denis, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, we, in
this House, have spent the last three years listening to myths being
spread by Bloc Quebecois members and their PQ friends in
Quebec. The first such myth is that Quebec is not getting its fair
share from the Canadian government. This is a myth which Bloc
members continue to spread, with the help of their friends.
The facts are undeniable: year after year, Quebecers receive
more than they contribute in federal taxes. As for equalization
payments, they receive 42 per cent of the total amount. I hope that
some day Quebecers will be told the truth.
(1230)
My question to the Bloc member is this: Why is the Quebec
government, which is also my government, unable to balance its
debts or, to be more specific, unable to reduce its deficit, like other
provincial governments have done? Indeed, other provincial
governments have implemented changes. Mr. Klein even
announced a surplus.
I find it sad that the object of the hon. member's whole speech is
to blame the federal government. These are myths, and we must
say so. We have a responsibility to Canadians and to Quebecers,
but so does the provincial government. We have taken action
because the Quebec government did not act to eliminate poverty
among Quebec children, women and families.
I would like to know what the Bloc has done to help the
provincial government achieve its goals.
Mr. Bélisle: Mr. Speaker, I thank the member for Saint-Denis
for her question. My colleague spoke of myths. She said we were
perpetuating myths. I would like to tell her that the biggest myth
circulating in Quebec and in Canada is the one about centralizing
federalism as practised in Canada for the last 30 years, during 20 of
which the Liberals were in power. That is the biggest myth.
The Government of Quebec is having difficulties because the
federal government is offloading its deficit onto the backs of the
provinces.
Let us take the example of research and development. Over the
last ten years or so, Quebec has received approximately 17 per cent
of federal research and development grants, while the neighbouring
province of Ontario has received 50 per cent. Historically, the
federal government has always put less money into economy
building measures.
What Quebecers want is not just transfer payments to help
subsidize welfare and assistance to the less fortunate members of
society. What they want from the federal government is spending
that will have an impact on the economy, such as Ontario has seen
for ten years or so. Historically, Quebec has never received its fair
share.
When there are massive cuts by the federal government in
transfer payments, such as we are now experiencing, Quebec is
more severely affected than Ontario or other provinces. The federal
government has not put money where it would have allowed
Quebec to have proportionately fewer people living in poverty.
When this kind of spending is cut, people are hard hit.
Finally, the flexible federalism, the decentralized federalism we
keep hearing about from the Prime Minister and the federal
government is always based on a double standard. If this is the kind
of distinct society the Liberal government wants to talk to us about,
we are not interested.
Take the case of the GST. The maritimes received $1 billion in
compensation for harmonizing with the GST. Quebec did the same
thing in 1991 without a cent of compensation, when it should have
received approximately $1.9 billion. If that is what they mean by
distinct society, treating Quebec differently where taxes are
involved, I can understand that Quebecers are increasingly
considering sovereignty.
I would also like to tell the member for Saint-Denis that what the
Bloc Quebecois most dislikes about the Minister of Finance's
budget is its scattershot approach. The amounts involved are small,
a few million dollars, and they have been ladled out all over the
place. Rather than watering down the impact of the $1 billion
available in the 1997 budget, why did they not target one or two
specific areas in order to produce a bigger bang in terms of jobs and
wealth?
Mrs. Bakopanos: Mr. Speaker, as I said before, there are myths
and myths. When a government spends taxpayers' money on
political propaganda, there is less money left to invest in helping
young people and the poor.
Mr. Loubier: Oh, oh.
Mrs. Bakopanos: It is true. But I have another question for my
colleague. As I said before, what does the provincial government
intend to do to balance its books? Taxes cannot absorb everything. I
pay a lot of income tax in Quebec.
(1235)
Mr. Bélisle: Mr. Speaker, I want to thank the hon. member for
Saint-Denis for her question.
8373
Speaking of propaganda, I hardly think we can criticize the
Government of Quebec, when we consider the 23 million flags
distributed by the Minister of Canadian Heritage.
The hon. member for Saint-Denis asked me how the Quebec
government will balance its books at the end of the current fiscal
year and in the years to come, to help the disadvantaged. Well, it
will not be easy. The Quebec cabinet is involved in a series of
complex accounting exercises. They may have to renegotiate
collective agreements with unions in the public and parapublic
sector, and that will not be easy.
Now, if the federal government were to send, as soon as possible,
a first instalment on the $1.9 billion the federal government owes
to Quebec for harmonizing the GST with its provincial sales tax,
that would be a good start.
If the federal government then sent another cheque as a first
instalment on the $2 billion in transfer payments that were cut in
the case of Quebec, over the past few years, we would be well on
our way to balancing the budget, and we could go ahead and give
people additional protection.
As I said before, historically, the percentage of disadvantaged
people and poor people has always been higher in Quebec, because
the federal government never did the kind of strategic spending it
did in Ontario and the other provinces.
What Quebecers want is research and development and
investment in technology.
Mrs. Bakopanos: They want political stability too.
Mr. Bélisle: We have had more than enough welfare, social
assistance and unemployment.
Mrs. Bakopanos: Mr. Speaker, I am very proud I was elected in
Quebec. I am a Quebecer and a Canadian. I want to say this because
some hon. members do not believe me, but the Liberals also defend
the interests of Quebecers.
The hon. member said it was always the federal government's
fault. Another myth that our separatist friends have perpetuated.
By the way, he did not answer to my question. ``It is the federal
government's fault again'', is something we have heard in Quebec
for years. I want my provincial government to take steps to ensure
that with the co-operation of the federal government we can
improve the lives of all people, especially the people in the riding
of Saint-Denis, and we do that by providing political stability.
Mr. Bélisle: Mr. Speaker, I have the following comment for the
hon. member for Saint-Denis. Will the hon. member promise, on
behalf of her government, that the federal government will stop
reducing transfer payments once and for all? Could she promise, on
behalf of her government, that these cuts will be stopped once and
for all?
The government is trying to balance its public finances, and this
is not easy. I think it will manage. There is a budget plan. At the
summit last year, there was an agreement with employer
associations and unions in Quebec. There was a consensus to the
effect that Quebec's budget would be balanced by March 31, 2000.
I think we are on the right track.
However, if the federal government keeps reducing historic
transfer payments to Quebec, it will be well high impossible.
[English]
Mr. Glen McKinnon (Brandon-Souris, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, I
will be sharing my time with the member for Vancouver South.
It is a pleasure to rise today to speak in response to the budget
speech. I would first like to congratulate the minister and all the
assistants who laid the foundation for this budget. It was a job well
done. I think it has been well received across the country.
When I consider all the nuances of the budget, it is the human
component that to me is the most significant. Addressing child
poverty, support for the disabled, youth employment initiatives,
health care reform and pension adjustments are just a few. It is my
wish today to discuss post secondary education as the focus of my
comments.
(1240)
We live in a world where knowledge and education are the keys
to long term industrial success. They ensure that a country's
industries can apply innovation to seize new opportunities in global
markets and they provide workers with the skills employers need.
The number clearly indicate this. In Manitoba, my home
province, in 1995 only 4..8 per cent of students who dropped out of
high school have found jobs, compared to 71.9 per cent who stayed
in school, graduated and found employment.
Post secondary graduates fared even better. About 80 per cent of
Manitobans with a post-secondary certificate or diploma or
university degree were actively involved in the labour force. This
pattern is virtually the same across the country.
It is for this reason that the government has increased federal
support for post-secondary education by $137 million in 1997,
reaching $275 million annually when the changes have all matured.
This funding is targeted to provide assistance for students and
their families, including workers upgrading their skills to help
them cope with the rising costs of post-secondary education,
students facing higher debt loads after graduation, and parents
saving for their children's educational future.
8374
I should note that these issues build on the $80 million increase
in direct federal tax assistance for post-secondary education that
was provided in the budget one year ago and they are
complemented by the creation of the Canada Foundation for
Innovation which will ensure that post-secondary students have
access to better facilities and equipment to prepare for the
knowledge based economy of the 21st century. For this the
government is making up front investments of $800 million.
I will get to the foundation in a moment, but first let me discuss
the government's plans to increase access to higher education.
Specifically, the budget proposes several measures. First, the
amount used to establish the education credit will immediately rise
to $150 per month from $100 and to $200 per month for 1998 and
subsequent years.
As tuition fees increase, the amount of assistance provided by
the tuition fee credit increases automatically. However, as a parent
of three daughters who are all attending university, and as an aside
all three were in university in one academic year, I know that
students also have to pay a number of mandatory fees on top of
their tuition. The budget proposes to extend the tuition tax credit to
cover additional mandatory fees imposed by universities to cover
these costs of higher education.
Second, students or their parents may not have enough tax
payable in a given year to fully benefit from the tuition and
education credits. To ensure that all students can use those credits
fully, students will now be able to carry forward all unused portions
of these credits and to be applied against any future income.
At a time when university and college classrooms are filled with
more and more mature students, it is important to note that this
measure will also benefit workers who have decided to return to
school after a short period in the workforce.
To demonstrate the effect of these budget measures I will give a
simple example. By 1998 a student in full time attendance at a
post-secondary institution faced with tuition fees of $2,800 and an
additional fee of $300 will receive over $1,200 in combined federal
and provincial tax assistance per year. This is no small amount. In
fact, it represents an increase of more than 30 per cent from the
$900 of assistance available to the student in 1995.
The 1997 budget also announced an important change to the
Canada student loans program. Students are expected to start
repaying their loan six months after graduation. But students facing
hardship are allowed to defer making payments on these loans for
up to 18 months. The federal government pays the interest accruing
on the student loan during this period.
Recently a coalition of groups representing the post-secondary
educational community agreed that while this system provides
considerable help, changes needed to be made and they issued a
proposal which pointed out among other things that some students
are unfortunately left unable to meet these obligations. I supported
this coalition in their call for change, as did other members of
Parliament.
(1245)
It is clear today that our government listened to what Canadians
were telling it and subsequently agreed. As a result, the budget
proposed to extend to 30 months from 18 months the period of time
during which students are allowed to defer making payments.
Combined with the initial six months after graduation when no
payments are required, this means that students will have up to
three years to deal with their financial debt load. This measure will
come into effect on August 1, 1997. It is projected that it will
provide an additional $20 million a year in assistance to students.
In addition, the federal government is ready to pursue with
interested provinces, lenders and other groups a new repayment
option that would offer students another choice. Students would be
able to choose between current repayment arrangements and an
income contingent repayment schedule. By tailoring payments to
individual circumstances, the debt would be made more
manageable.
We are also acting to improve incentives for parents to save for
their children's education. Parents with young children are
increasingly worried about whether or not they will be able to
afford the rising costs of their children's education.
Registered education savings plans, or RESPs, exist to provide
parents with incentives to save for their children's education. The
full benefits of these tax sheltered plans are reaped by parents who
start saving when their children are quite young.
The budget proposes that annual contribution limits to RESPs be
doubled to $4,000. This will assist parents who are not able to start
saving for their children's education when they are young and
therefore have fewer years to make contributions.
Under RESP provisions, all RESP income must go for
educational purposes and the family loses the investment income in
their plan if their child does not pursue post-secondary education.
Since this can discourage parents from starting an RESP, two
measures are proposed to address this problem.
Individuals winding up an RESP will now be allowed to transfer
all or part of this deferred income to RRSPs, provided they still
have room in their RRSP accounts. Alternatively, individuals
without available RRSP room or who do not wish to make RRSP
contributions will be allowed to receive investment income
directly, subject to an appropriate charge. This charge will ensure
that assistance is not provided to those who might use RESPs for
tax
8375
shelter purposes which are unrelated to either education or
retirement savings.
The government is proposing the creation of the Canada
foundation for innovation. I would suggest that this is perhaps the
crown jewel in terms of educational opportunities in this country.
This new independent body operating at arm's length from the
government is designed to help renew facilities and equipment,
research infrastructure if you will, at Canadian post-secondary
institutions associated with research institutions and hospitals.
Through this foundation we are saying to our young students that
we want them to pursue their research career here in Canada. It is
important for us to have a workforce with the capacity to put new
technologies into practice. People who understand developments in
science and technology are indispensable.
The foundation will help support innovative capital projects in
the areas of health, the environment, science and engineering.
Funded through an up front investment of $800 million by the
federal government, it will provide an annual average of $180
million over the next five years. It will operate on the basis of
partnerships with the private sector, universities and colleges,
volunteer organizations and provinces to the extent they wish to
participate.
In closing, I quote the hon. Minister of Finance who in his
speech said: ``What government does with scarce resources shows
what its values are-''
The Deputy Speaker: I am sorry to interrupt the hon. member
but his time has expired. Questions or comments.
Mr. Len Taylor (The Battlefords-Meadow Lake, NDP): Mr.
Speaker, I appreciate the words of the hon. member from
Manitoba. I have enjoyed listening to him over the past three years.
He has made great commitments on behalf of the people he
represents. Therefore, I am a bit surprised that he has so gullibly
jumped into the rhetoric of the finance minister on the budget.
(1250 )
The member comes from a constituency that relies on the rural
sector for its own buoyant economy. This budget had very little to
offer to people who live in rural Canada, particularly those areas
that were affected by cutbacks to the western grain transportation
program of previous budgets of this government.
In previous budgets there was $720 million a year cut from
farmers' pockets for transporting grain to port so that Canada can
sell it into the lucrative export market. In those previous budgets
which took that $720 million from transportation and ultimately
from farmers' pockets, we were told at the time that value added
production would return benefits to rural Canada and would
therefore create jobs.
Value added production since that time has not increased
dramatically. While there have been some gains made in Winnipeg,
Saskatoon and Regina, there have been virtually no gains made in
small town western Canada. This budget should have
acknowledged the greater need for value added production in rural
Canada giving the opportunity for a number of the young
unemployed individuals throughout Canada, many of whom the
member talked about in his remarks, the opportunity to gain some
income to proceed with their post-secondary education.
My question to the member for Brandon-Souris is quite simple:
Will he work to assist young people in rural Canada to generate the
type of economic activity that is necessary in the Cut Knifes, the
North Battlefords, the Kindersleys and Brandons of the world and
ensure that the government supports their efforts through a value
added production type of programming?
Mr. McKinnon: Mr. Speaker, I thank my colleague for his
question. It is relevant to a member from southwestern Manitoba.
We have had a number of initiatives under way in Manitoba
since the WGTA changes took place. We have probably had the
most diversified investments occurring throughout the prairies in
terms of our region and in terms of crop diversification.
We had numerous investments put in place of technologies that
are going to lead to an increased economy. Working through our
rural caucus colleagues here in Ottawa we have been able to spur
debate, discussion and interest in investment. Might I comment
that Manitoba has had more investment money coming in since the
WGTA changes than any other region of the country. As it pertains
to post-secondary education which was the essence of my
discussion, it is going to allow more young Manitobans to stay in
our region, live in our region, invest in our region and make a
substantial contribution to the nation.
The Deputy Speaker: There is only 49 seconds left. Sharing 49
seconds gets a little difficult.
Mr. McKinnon: I should have spoken a little longer.
Mr. Harbance Singh Dhaliwal (Vancouver South, Lib.): Mr.
Speaker, I am very happy to speak on the budget today. It is an
excellent budget. There are a couple of very important ingredients
in the budget. Generally it is a balanced budget, it is a responsible
budget and it is a compassionate budget. Let me state why those
three things are very important for us on the government side.
The budget had to be balanced because we want to ensure that
the actions we have taken on the deficit do not take away from the
future. I know some people have said that they want to get rid of the
deficit in three years but we have said right from the beginning that
8376
our approach in dealing with the deficit would be balanced and
reasonable and that we would deal with it in a compassionate and
responsible way.
(1255 )
When we became the government there was a $42 billion deficit,
a problem which many said was very difficult to deal with. During
the first radio show I did after the election Bill Good asked me if
my government was really going to deal with the deficit. I said that
absolutely, we were going to deal with it because it was important
for the future of the country, but that we were going to do it in a
responsible way.
In the last election campaign we set specific targets and said that
we were going to meet those targets. In the last four budgets we
have met all the targets; in fact, we have done better than meeting
the targets. It was very important to meet every one of our targets
because it sent the very strong message to the international
financial community that we were serious about dealing with the
deficit.
Some of the Reform members are trying to take credit for our
actions on the deficit but during election time we set specific
targets, not because of the Reform Party but because we felt it was
important to deal with it. Those targets have been met and as the
minister stated in the last budget, we will be at least $5 billion
below our target of $24 billion.
It was very important to meet our targets for a number of
reasons. Because of the confidence we have established in the
international community, our dollar has stabilized. Interest rates
are unprecedented; I cannot remember the last time Canadian
interest rates were below American interest rates. Our interest rates
are presently more than two and a half per cent below the American
interest rates. In the past it has always been the reverse, where the
American interest rates were two to two and a half per cent below
the Canadian interest rates.
This is what will create jobs. Opposition members have asked,
what about jobs? Low interest rates create jobs, investment and
confidence. Interest rates play a major role in the investment
decisions of small and medium size businesses. If someone wants
to construct a new building, for example, a new hotel or a new
factory, interest rates will play a very important role in determining
if that investment will go ahead. Canadians buying homes have to
look at what the interest rates are. Interest rates can affect their
choice of a home because of their influence on monthly mortgage
payments. When Canadians buy cars, the interest rate is an
important factor which determines whether or not they can afford
to buy a car.
We have one of the lowest inflation rates of the G-7 countries.
This will ensure the maintenance of our low interest rates.
All these things, dealing with the deficit, meeting our targets,
having credibility in the financial markets, have led to lower
interest rates, lower inflation rates and a greater confidence in the
economy. It is so much so that economists are predicting Canada
will have the best growth figures in the next medium term
compared to other G-7 countries. It was not any easy task and all
Canadians know that. It was a difficult task to achieve what we
have today.
The attitude of this government and the finance minister was to
look at government from the bottom up. We did not just say that to
deal with the deficit we were going to cut everybody by a certain
percentage. As a government we said that we wanted to review all
programs starting from the bottom up. We said that we wanted to
get rid of those programs that were no longer relevant to
Canadians. We said that we wanted to get rid of those crown
corporations that were no longer relevant to Canadians. We looked
at how we could turn those services that could be provided more
efficiently and effectively by private industry, municipal
governments and provincial governments over to them.
Canadians have said to us that they want a government that is
efficient, that they want less duplication and less waste. That is
another area we looked at in terms of saving money and dealing
with the deficit. We asked: Where is there waste in government?
Where are there inefficiencies? How can we do it better? This was
the basic view we took in trying to deal with the deficit and in
trying to re-engineer government to meet the 21st century, to move
forward into the next century where we could have a government
structure that could be with us for a long time. It was not an easy
task. It was a difficult task, but that is what we have done.
(1300)
We also understood that there are investments to be made in this
country so that we could be competitive in the rest of the world,
that Canadian products could be sold. The reality is there is
globalization. We have to compete on the international market.
Canada is a trading nation.
We understood, for example, that infrastructure is very
important to be competitive around the world. If we have road
systems, ports, airports that are efficient we will be more
competitive. If we have a communications system that is efficient
and responsive we will be able to be more competitive in the rest of
the world. If we have ports that can ship products very efficiently it
helps the business community because it is more efficient and
much more cost effective. We understood that. That is why we had
an infrastructure program to ensure that we maintain the
infrastructure and improve it for the coming century.
We also recognized that research and development is very
important. Any country that does not do research and development
falls behind. So in this budget we have said that there will be $800
million in the Canada Foundation for Innovation, $800 million
8377
toward research and development which, by the way, will be
administered by the private sector. It will determine where it is
most advantageous for Canadians to spend that money.
We also understand how important trade is for Canada. That is
why we have the Prime Minister's Team Canada missions where he
has travelled to the Asia-Pacific, to South America and other
regions to tell other countries that Canada is ready for business.
Canada has the expertise. It has the skills. It has the products to
deliver to people around the world.
I can say having the opportunity to travel and meet many leaders
around the world that other countries want to do business with
Canada. They know the type of products that we can provide. They
know the skills, the efficiencies and the quality of the products
which Canada provides in goods and services. They have all said
``We want to see Canada at the table. We want them to be there
because we are confident in the services and products they
provide''.
We understand how education is so very important for
Canadians. That is why we have made it easier for students to pay
back their loans, to give them more time and not to have to pay
back their loans in the first six months but over 30 months to give
students that leeway.
As well, we have said we want to encourage people to invest in
education. That is why the registered education savings plan has
been doubled from $2,000 a year to $4,000 a year to encourage
Canadians to invest in education and invest in their children.
We recognize that truly children are our future. I am proud of
this government's work on child poverty where we have invested in
children. We are making sure that we help those children of the
working poor. That is the recognition of a country with true
compassion that cares for those people who are less fortunate.
Mr. Herb Grubel (Capilano-Howe Sound, Ref.): Mr.
Speaker, as you might know, I will not be seeking office in the
upcoming election. Therefore today I am definitely giving my last
speech as an MP in this House in reaction to a government budget.
Let me start my comments with a brief assessment of the
budgetary policy of this government during the last three years.
The $42 billion deficit in 1993 required urgent and decisive
action. This view was shared by most Canadians and it produced
the historic electoral success of the Reform Party which ran on the
platform of fiscal responsibility. There are a number of indications
suggesting that in 1993 neither the Liberal Party nor the finance
minister fully appreciated the severity of the country's fiscal crisis.
For this reason the first budget in 1994 reflected the belief that
Canada would grow out of the crisis if we just reined in the growth
in spending.
(1305)
The 1995 budget showed that reality had finally mugged the
minister and his party. I take pride in my and my colleagues'
contribution to driving home the fundamental truth about the
effects of compounding interest and the risks associated with
threats to the value of Canadian bonds caused by growing debt to
GDP ratios.
Pressed in addition by high interest rates, warnings by Moody's
about the downgrading of the debt and slow economic growth, the
government bit the bullet and announced substantial cuts to
program spending and some relatively small but still substantial
tax increases.
The minister deserved the positive reaction to his historic budget
given by the financial markets and the Canadian public. I praised
the minister for having lowered program spending in absolute
dollar values for the first time in post-war history.
I still believe that this praise was deserved. The 1996 budget
contained no substantial further cuts or tax changes. All the
politically difficult decisions had been made and embedded in the
1995 budget.
During the last two years, economic development largely outside
the control of government favoured the Liberals and their
budgetary goals. Economic growth remained moderately high
simply because the country enjoyed a cyclical upturn.
The growth was driven largely by strong exports to the United
States, which were fed in turn by a strong U.S. expansion and a low
dollar. Most important, interest rates in the U.S. trended
downward.
These fortunate exogenous developments produced better than
expected increases in revenue, along with decreases in interest
costs. As a result, the interest rate spread on short to medium term
bonds between Canada and the United States moved in favour of
Canada and resulted in even more moderate, positive effects on the
fiscal balance.
In light of the much better than expected and very fortuitous
improvements in the deficit, a large and vocal faction of the Liberal
caucus began agitating for a resumption of the party's traditional
policy of spending to buy votes for the next election, though of
course they always describe these spending programs as providing
compassionate aid to the unemployed and needy.
When the 1997 budget was revealed this week I, the financial
community and in my view most Canadians were pleased to find
out that the Minister of Finance increased spending and reduced
taxes only by a relatively small $1 billion.
8378
With most of the big increases coming a year or two in the
future, he has stayed the course of fiscal restraint in this election
year and stared down his spend thrift colleagues in the party.
Moreover, the spending increases he made were not of the
traditional make work, pork barrel variety but, with some
exception, involved projects that have a high probability of
bringing good social and economic returns.
Ironically, the basic pattern of the Liberal budgetary policy is
almost identical to what Reform had promised to do in its zero in
three election platform in 1993. However, there are several major
differences.
First, the cuts have not been fast and incisive enough. As a result,
in the 1997-98 fiscal year the deficit will still be $16 billion or
nearly $1.5 billion a month. This level of deficit may seem low by
historic and some international standards but by any other
standards it is still outrageously large. I repeat, we are adding to the
debt $1.5 billion every month. Divide this by 30 and you get $50
million a day.
An important consequence of this continued deficit is that it
exposes Canada to the risk of backslide should there be a
turnaround in economic fortunes like a rise in interest rates and
lower economic growth. Both these events are certain to take place
in the future.
For the sake of Canadians, let us hope that the economic
environment remains benign for several more years.
(1310 )
Also, because improvements in the fiscal balance have been so
slow, the debt is well over $600 billion and there are no plans for
paying it down. Very soon Canada's problem will not be the deficit
but the debt, if it is not already so.
Interest payments on the debt of $46 billion nearly equal what
the government spends on elderly benefits, OAS and others,
employment insurance, formerly known as unemployment
insurance, and social transfers to the provinces combined. Let me
repeat this. The sins of the past decade, including the last three
years, have resulted in an outcome whereby the cost of servicing
the result of those sins takes up the same amount of money as our
very generous and expensive program of old age security benefits,
now called the elderly program, unemployment insurance and the
social transfers for health, higher education and welfare. This is
truly an astounding number.
When interest rates go up again, the problem will be even worse.
Only debt repayment can end this regretful state of affairs.
The media has finally picked up on one of my main themes in
past comments on the budget. Two-thirds of the improvement in
the fiscal balance was achieved by increased tax revenues mostly
through bracket creep, partly through tax rate increases and some
through the growth of population and wealth. Only one-third of the
fiscal improvement has been due to cuts in program spending.
Unfortunately half of these cuts involved downloading of the
adjustment burden on the provinces which in turn have cut funds
for health care, higher education and welfare. Only a meagre 35 per
cent of the reduction on program spending involved cuts to the size
of the federal government, the departments which provide
subsidies to business, regions and special interest groups which
offer services which duplicate and overlap those delivered by the
provinces.
Finally, I was very disappointed that the budget did not start the
most fundamental debate that Canadians will have to face in the
future. Assuming that economic conditions continue favourably
and that the deficit will be eliminated in the year 2000 or so, the
debate will be over the use of future dividends.
Canada faces three choices. The fiscal dividend can be used to
lower taxes and gradually produce a smaller government.
Alternatively, it can be used to pay down the debt and start a
virtuous cycle of growing fiscal surpluses which in turn can be used
for further debt and tax reductions. The third possible use of the
fiscal surplus is increased spending and a larger and more intrusive
government.
The next election should involve the discussion of these different
paths for the development of Canada. Any government elected in
1997 or 1998 will face the need to decide on this matter. There are
obviously no best choices. Each of the three alternatives has
advantages and disadvantages. However, in the light of post-war
experiences, in my view bigger government does not appear to
promise many benefits for society at large.
Surely there are always beneficiaries from government largesse
and they always tell good stories on why they deserve the goodies
from the state. However, as we look back on the decades since the
1960s it is difficult to find evidence that the massive expansion of
governments has produced a significant improvement in the lot of
the average Canadian above that due to general and largely
exogenously determined economic growth.
If we believe the government's statistics and read the public
opinion surveys, poverty, educational attainment, health care,
crime and unemployment are worse than they were before the
massive growth in spending after the 1960s. In my view it defies
logic to argue that because past spending has produced the
deterioration of these standards we therefore should have spent
more.
I know I am running out of time but I have just one last page. I
assure the House that I know the arguments on the other side. Some
are good but most involve rhetoric and wishful thinking.
8379
I admit that I may be wrong about the merit of large
government. It is for this reason that I think we need a national
debate on this issue. What a shame that the 1997 budget did not
set the framework for such a debate during the upcoming election.
Mr. Barry Campbell (Parliamentary Secretary to Minister of
Finance, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, I have worked with the member for
Capilano-Howe Sound over three years now, as both of us are
members of the finance committee. We may not agree on
everything. However, the member for Capilano-Howe Sound
always has been fair and always has been prepared to give credit
where credit is due. He has done so consistently through the last
three budgets, in which I know he took a great interest and. He
spent a great deal of time sharing his views with us about what the
government should do and responding to what it had done on each
occasion.
(1315)
His colleagues talk a great deal about doing politics differently.
As he prepares to leave the House, on behalf of the Minister of
Finance, myself and many of my colleagues, I want to say the
member for Capilano-Howe Sound is truly one who has done
politics differently in the House. I compliment him for it. He will
be missed.
Mr. Grubel: Mr. Speaker, the member is getting me into a lot of
trouble with my party, which is not a very nice thing to do.
However, you will have noticed that when I presented the summary
of my experiences over the last four years I did come down very
hard on the shortcomings of the policies. There is a clear difference
in vision between the Liberal Party, the Reform Party and other
parties on the right.
This should be emphasized and made clear in discussion and
should be on the level of historic tax experience and not just hand
waving.
Mr. Len Taylor (The Battlefords-Meadow Lake, NDP): Mr.
Speaker, I hate to get involved in this lovefest between the Liberals
and the Reform Party. However, the parliamentary secretary is
correct that the member for Capilano-Howe Sound has done
things differently in the House and that is certainly to his credit.
One thing he said in his opening remarks bears repeating. I
would ask him to shuffle his notes a little bit and share with us
again his comments about how basically the Reform Party policy
of a few years ago has been implemented by the government. It is
worth noting from the point of view of most Canadians that the
government is a party of the right and does share a number of the
viewpoints of the Reform Party. It is incumbent on all of us to get it
right.
If the member would care to share with us again his comment
about the government implementing Reform policy, we would all
appreciate it.
Mr. Grubel: Mr. Speaker, I think the division was quite clear
during the election campaign and the people spoke clearly. One
party said that it could not go on adding to the debt the way it had
happened in the preceding 15 years. Two governments and two
different parties had engaged in this spendthrift policy. In effect,
the government has cut program spending, as Reform had
proposed. We had proposed reducing interprovincial transfers.
Instead it cut transfers for health, education and welfare which we
had not proposed.
There are a large number of parallels but also some significant
differences. The point I am trying to emphasize, which came out
clearly in the numbers I gave, is that the deficit had to be brought
under control. That was done. The government should be given
credit for it. It did not do it right and I outlined why it was not done
right and what the consequences of it were.
I believe my statement is basically correct. I am proud that
because we had this agenda, we have helped prepare the way for the
Liberal government to do what is right for Canada.
Mr. Dick Harris (Prince George-Bulkley Valley, Ref.): Mr.
Speaker, I am most anxious to participate in the debate on the
Liberal budget.
I must say at the outset that the Liberal budget can best be
described as an example of sleight of hand at its finest. The budget
is sprinkled full of little goodies, but it is simply an attempt to
conceal the Liberals' real record. And what a record it is.
(1320)
Unemployment and bankruptcies are at record levels. Taxes are
at record levels. Funding for health care and education has been
slashed to record lows. We are approaching a record national debt
level of $600 billion, with debt servicing costs reaching a record
$50 billion a year.
The Liberals like to congratulate themselves on lowering the
deficit, but it was done on the backs of Canadian taxpayers,
students trying to get an education and Canadians who have
suffered under health care cutbacks. That is the record of this
Liberal government.
Let us not forget how Liberal taxation policies have affected the
pensions of seniors and will continue to affect the retirement plans
of seniors.
The Liberals have brought in 36 new tax measures and raised tax
revenues by a record $24 billion. The deficit has fallen by $33
billion since 1993 and, therefore, a full 92 per cent of the reduction
in the deficit is a result of Liberal higher taxation revenues. That is
nothing to be proud of. Anyone can pull that golden handle and
wrench more dollars out of Canadian taxpayers. Even this Liberal
government can do that.
8380
The government has not reduced its spending significantly. It
has not made government more efficient, as the Reform Party has
cited. It has battled the deficit by squeezing Canadian taxpayers.
This is not the only thing Liberals are good at. They are good at
cutting transfer payments in support of health care and education to
achieve a reduction in the deficit. That is not what the Reform Party
wants to do. Reformers want to give Canadians a tax break. We
want to restore funding to education and health care. At the same
time, we want to cut $15 billion from the operation of government.
That is where the big blood is.
The Liberals have battled the deficit by squeezing Canadian
taxpayers. That is the only thing they are good at, shaking the
money tree known as the Canadian taxpayer. The taxpayer is the
Liberals' magic cash register. When they need more money for
bigger government, bigger bureaucracy, bigger payments and
bigger programs they dip into their cash register, the pockets of
hard working Canadians.
The average Canadian family has seen its disposable household
income shrink by $3,000 under the Liberal government. Every
reputable economist in the country will testify to that, but the
Liberals are in denial. Canadian families will testify that they have
$3,000 less to spend to put food on the table, to put clothes on their
kids' backs, to pay their medicare premiums and to provide the
necessities of life. What kind of a record is that?
Do we know who does not have to worry about getting a job
when the Liberals are in power? Liberal party fundraisers, former
candidates, former Liberal provincial leaders and past party
presidents. They do not have to worry about what the government
is doing because they are getting jobs, while 1.5 million Canadians
who do not hold Liberal memberships are looking for jobs.
The government has appointed hundreds of party faithful to
various boards, agencies and commissions; appointments which
come with obscene paycheques and obscene perks. That is being
done despite the fact that the Liberal red ink book talks about
making appointments based on merit. It seems that the only merit
which is required is the $10 for a Liberal membership.
Why am I even referring to this flawed Liberal election
document? Nobody believes it any more, not even the Liberals.
They have stopped quoting from it because they were caught so
badly in the big GST lie. There are so many broken promises in it
they do not even dare use it any more. It is too bad, I would love to
see the Liberals bring that out when they go to the election that is
coming soon. They can bring out that red book and talk about all
the promises they have kept and we will talk about the promises
they have not kept.
(1325)
The Liberals red book has proved one thing only. It is not worth
the paper it is written on. This red book will continue to give the
Liberals headaches in the 1997 election as they twist, turn, flip and
flop their policies when the policy winds change. And, Mr.
Speaker, in case you did not know, Liberal philosophy and policy
do change. They say ``these are my policies, if you don't like them
give me a little while and I'll come up with some new ones''.
I would like to return to the chronic problem of the 1.5 million
Canadians who are unemployed. The Liberals do not believe us
when we say tax cuts create jobs. Maybe they will believe evidence
from some non-partisan sources. The Cato Institute in Washington
studied 10 tax cutting states and 10 tax hiking states between 1990
and 1995. These are figures that they will not want to listen to but,
Mr. Speaker, I know you will want to hear this.
This study discovered that the tax cutting states created nearly
two million net new jobs. The 10 tax hiking states created zero net
new jobs. Furthermore, the economies of the tax cutting states grew
22 per cent faster than those of states which continued to raise
taxes. Michigan was one of the states in that study that cut
taxes-maybe the Liberals should know this-15 times since 1991
and brought the state back from economic ruin. Now it has an
unemployment rate that is at its lowest since the 1960s.
In the Reform's fresh start program we argue that taxes kill jobs.
We argue that tax relief creates jobs. Every single economic think
tank in the country, perhaps in the world, knows and agrees that
taxes kill jobs. Taxation kills jobs.
Yet this government has just imposed a $10 billion payroll tax on
Canadian businesses and Canadian workers. That defies logic.
When every economic think tank in the country agrees that taxes
kill jobs except for the socialist economic think tanks that the
Liberals call on from time to time for their policies, and the NDP as
well. And every same thinking economic think tank knows and
confirms that taxes kill jobs.
It is because of these taxation policies that we have 1.5 million
people unemployed. It has killed the jobs and it has ripped the heart
out of our social programs of which these Liberals are so proud.
They have cut $7.5 billion from health care and education. No
matter what little crumbs they through out in this budget, let us not
forget that they are the ones who have cut the $7.5 billion from
health care and education.
Reform Party policies in the fresh start program make sense to
Canadians because they come from Canadians. We listen to
Canadians, not like the Liberals who listen to their well-heeled
back room advisers. This budget is smoke and mirrors. It is sleight
8381
of hand at its finest. There is no way that our party and average
Canadians will accept it.
Mr. Robert D. Nault (Parliamentary Secretary to Minister of
Human Resources Development, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, I would like
to enter into the debate on what the individual who has just spoken
and represents the third party said.
(1330)
In the next election there is going to be a significant amount of
discussion as to what we do as country in the new millennium. Part
of that discussion is factually correct, as the previous speaker from
the Reform Party suggested, as to what we do with this major
surplus that will be achieved because of the good fiscal
management of the government.
In that discussion there are going to be a number of items. One is
Reformers in their platform have suggested that they are going to
make government smaller. They are suggesting some $15 billion in
cuts to the present government apparatus. My understanding in that
scenario is the Reform Party will have to cut some 80,000 to 85,000
public service jobs in order to achieve what it perceives as small,
efficient government.
We all know and the polls have showed continuously that
Canadians feel very strongly about their social programs, feel very
strongly about the ability to deliver those programs. I would like to
ask the member if he would comment on that particular item, and
while he is at it I would like to have him answer this for me.
Does the hon. member believe it is good economics for
governments to give across the board tax cuts, like Ontario has, to
the tune of so far 15 per cent in personal income tax, going up to 30
per cent of income tax reduction, which is a reduction in revenue of
$4.9 billion when they are running a $10 billion deficit? That
analysis is pretty easy if we picture the fact that this year they have
had to cut $6 billion worth of services in Ontario. That is $6 billion
of services that relate to education, relate to health, relate to
transfers to municipalities, which of course have turned things
upside down in the province of Ontario.
Would the member explain to me the whole issue of tax cuts
when we need those revenues and when we still have a major
deficit and whether he agrees or disagrees, and with his numbers as
they relate to the 80,000 cuts.
Mr. Harris: Mr. Speaker, I think it would be hard to get the
message on tax cuts across to this Liberal member in the next five
minutes. They have not learned anything in three and a half years
from us, so five minutes is not going to solve that problem.
The hon. member did talk about cutting the size of government.
The Liberals of course believe that big is better. There is no doubt
about that. They have displayed that.
Reformers, on the other hand, would prefer to work with a lean
and mean government, no waste. The problem with this Liberal
Party is it believes in this big bureaucracy. We want to be lean.
The fact is we want to cut spending. We want to cut the
government waste. There is about $15 billion a year in government
waste because of this big government policy that the Liberals are so
proud of.
The hon. member did not read our fresh start. We are going to
put $4 billion back into health care and education. The Liberals
ripped the heart out of those programs to the tune of $7.5 billion.
How could the hon. member have the audacity to stand up and
say that it is the Reformers who are going to hurt health care and
education when his very government has ripped $7.5 billion out of
health care and education? How does he explain that to people in
my town who go to the hospital and find a third of the beds closed
and line-ups for operations? How does he explain that to students
who cannot afford tuitions because of the cutbacks that this Liberal
government has made in education?
That is hypocritical. That is hypocrisy at its finest, absolute
hypocrisy.
Mrs. Brenda Chamberlain (Guelph-Wellington, Lib.): Mr.
Speaker, I am pleased to speak to this motion and in support of the
1997-98 federal budget. This budget continues the course set on
October 25, 1993 when Canadians voted for change in the last
federal election. It provides the tools necessary to help keep
Canada the best country in the world.
When the Liberal government was elected in 1993 we had three
choices. Two were easy. The third was difficult.
(1335)
The first choice we had was to continue spending without any
concern for the future, as the past Conservative government did. In
nine years the Conservatives nearly tripled the debt and left us with
a deficit of nearly $45 billion.
It would have been easy in the short term to give everyone all
they wanted, to add to the deficit and debt and to let someone else
deal with the problem, just as the Reform Party now is proposing
on the CPP issue. That would have been irresponsible and it would
have placed Canada's future and our sovereignty at risk.
The second easy choice would have been to make deficit
elimination our only goal, as it used to be the Reform Party's. In
doing so we could have easily abandoned the sick, the elderly,
those most vulnerable and possibly eliminated the deficit much
faster.
It would have also been irresponsible because it would have
caused pain by ignoring the millions of Canadians who rely on the
federal government for their pensions, for health care, for post-sec-
8382
ondary education and for the countless government services
provided each and every day.
Instead, Liberals opted for a third choice, one that was
challenging, difficult and required imagination, innovation and
responsibility. This third choice was to reduce the deficit while
preserving social programs.
We know that the efforts initiated by the Liberal government
have been difficult. They have meant fewer public servant
positions. They have required new ways of doing business in
government and they have called for sacrifice.
In doing so, we are admired around the world for the way we
have turned our federal budget around and for ensuring that those
most vulnerable are cared for which is, after all, the reason we are
the best country in the world.
The finance minister visited Guelph on November 12, 1996. In
doing so, he participated in a call-in program on our local radio
station, CJOY. He met with reporters from the Guelph Mercury and
the Guelph Tribune and his visit to Guelph must have had
enormous impact on him because this is truly a
Guelph-Wellington budget.
When the minister announced $800 million for the new Canada
Foundation for Innovation, he was speaking directly to the
researchers and administration of the University of Guelph.
He spoke directly to President Mordechai Rozanski, Larry
Milligan and others who asked me to help them in their work. Our
commitment to fund research infrastructure will ensure that the
place of the University of Guelph as the finest post-secondary
education facility in Canada will not be challenged.
When the budget promotes donations to charitable organizations
it speaks directly to Morris Twist of the United Way social planning
council, to Lindsay Kennedy of the Wellington County literacy
council and to Jassy Narayan of Onward Willow.
It encourages the thousands of volunteers who help make
Guelph-Wellington the best community in Canada and it makes
the responsibility of the professionals who run social service
agencies, clubs and foundations a little easier.
When the budget provides more funding for infrastructure, it
responds to a resolution passed on February 3, 1997 by Guelph city
council asking for the continuation of this important initiative.
In providing more assistance for people with disabilities, it is in
direct response to the recommendations and suggestions offered by
groups and individuals in Guelph-Wellington to the task force
chaired by our colleague from Fredericton-York-Sunbury.
In promoting trade, this federal budget has said to business
leaders in Guelph-Wellinton like James Watson of Armtec, Wolf
Haessler of Skyjack and Hock Choong of Semex that others will be
allowed to benefit from Team Canada as they have.
I have been allowed a number of opportunities, especially as
chair of the national Liberal caucus committee on economic
development, to speak to the finance minister on priorities for the
people of Guelph-Wellington.
(1340 )
In response to a survey I sent out in December 1994, my
constituents identified three areas of importance for federal
spending: health, social services and youth. When the finance
minister presented his budget on February 18 he spoke to those
priorities.
We have encouraged our young people through initiatives like
the youth employment strategy and in helping parents and students
to cope with the rising costs of post-secondary education to obtain
the experience and education necessary in today's changing
workforce. By assisting young people to obtain a post-secondary
degree we are also helping the people of Guelph-Wellington
whose jobs are dependent upon a growing student population.
In providing $300 million over three years to assist efforts to
find new and better ways to meet Canada's health care needs we are
acknowledging the many people in Guelph-Wellington who have
asked us to make health care a priority. I am pleased that a health
transition fund will provide funding for projects that could include
home care services. If this fund means that people can stay in their
homes longer then it will mean much for the elderly and the sick in
Guelph-Wellington and all across Canada.
In developing the new Canada child tax benefit, we are not
abandoning the social safety net for those children and their parents
who need our help the most. These are exactly the kinds of federal
spending priorities that have been demanded by the people of
Guelph-Wellington; all of this while never wavering from our
deficit reduction targets.
There are those who are critical of this budget. They spoke
earlier. Let them come to Guelph-Wellington to address our
university researchers and tell them that they are opposed to the
Canada Foundation for Innovation. Let them visit our charities and
tell our volunteers that they are opposed to support for charitable
giving and let them respond to the thousands of
Guelph-Wellington residents who told me that health care is
important. Let them say to those people that they are opposed to
improving Canada's health care system. Let them meet our
students and their parents and say that they are opposed to
investing in post secondary education, and let them tell our citizens
with disabilities that they are opposed to our help.
8383
This budget does stay the course. In doing so it says that the
hard work, the sacrifices and the reductions that Canadians have
made since October 1993 were not lost. In fact, this is a budget
of hope and it is a budget for a stronger and brighter future.
[Translation]
Mr. Yvan Loubier (Saint-Hyacinthe-Bagot, BQ): Mr.
Speaker, I accept the invitation of my colleague for
Guelph-Wellington.
If she really wants us to, we will go to her riding to meet the
people, the researchers, the people affected by poverty or
unemployment, and we will explain to them as follows: in the past
three years and a half, the Liberal government has cut $4.5 billion
in transfer payments to the provinces to assist with their welfare,
education and health programs. Her government has also
jeopardized the income security system in Canada, the health
system, and part of the research activities.
Yes, we accept her invitation, and we will go and tell her
constituents in Guelph-Wellington the truth, no offence meant to
my colleague, as I do respect her abilities.
I would also like to challenge what she has said about the $800
million foundation. Let them stop treating us like imbeciles. The
$800 million is $800 million for the foundation, but new R & D
investments represent $180 million yearly, and $180 million is
very little in damage control by the federal government, after it has
made hundreds of millions of dollars in cuts, $500 million in R & D
alone. Part of the $4.5 billion in the Canada social transfer went for
funding research activities and infrastructures.
They have made cuts here, and now they are offering a little
treat, a little band-aid, a little ointment on the huge gaping wound
they themselves have caused. And they are patting themselves on
the back for it.
(1345)
Yes, we will go to your riding to explain that to your fellow
citizens, as we have been explaining it ever since you brought down
this clown's budget.
[English]
Mrs. Chamberlain: Mr. Speaker, I am so pleased to have the
opportunity to respond.
I will welcome my colleague into my riding. He needs to come
to my riding to tell the people of Guelph-Wellington and the rest
of Canada why he as a Bloc member wants to break up Canada. He
needs to explain why he has plunged Quebec into instability. He
needs to tell the people of Guelph-Wellington why we have lost
jobs in Canada. It is because of the instability and fear the Bloc has
put into the Canadian and Quebec people.
I would welcome this member into my area, let me tell you, Mr.
Speaker. Furthermore when his past leader, Mr. Bouchard,
travelled on taxpayers' money to promote separatism, my
community of Guelph-Wellington wrote petitions and stopped
Mr. Bouchard from travelling on taxpayers' money.
Mr. Len Taylor (The Battlefords-Meadow Lake, NDP): Mr.
Speaker, it is an interesting debate but unfortunately it does not
help the young people of Canada attend university and other
post-secondary educational institutions.
The member for Guelph-Wellington talked about the
innovation funding going to Guelph. I certainly support that
funding just as I would support it to the University of
Saskatchewan or to other institutions.
Like the member from the Bloc who spoke earlier and like many
people in Canada, I too am aware that on the one hand billions of
dollars have been taken out of education and health care funding by
the government. As a result the provincial governments and the
institutions have had to raise tuition fees and have changed the
student loans program to the extent that only the wealthy are able to
attend school.
The member talked about the innovation funding at the
university yet she is allowing the government to remove the
funding that caused the Government of Ontario to raise tuition fees
again this year by up to 20 per cent. If the students cannot go to the
universities, what good is the funding for research?
Mrs. Chamberlain: Mr. Speaker, I would first like to point out
to my hon. colleague, whom I like very much, that his own premier
in Saskatchewan who is also a member of the NDP, has had to get
Saskatchewan's finances in order. It seems to me all provinces have
finally realized that Canadians really do understand that we do
have to live within our means but we also have to choose priorities
with vision. Clearly in this budget that is exactly what has
happened.
Finally, after being elected in 1993 and hitting a financial wall
because of where we were brought to, we are now only seeing a
little bit of movement. We are able to begin putting money into
health care which this budget is doing, into post-secondary
education which this budget is doing, and into mechanisms like the
RESPs. Parents can use those and then transfer them back into their
RRSPs if they wish. There are a number of mechanisms in the
budget.
I know my hon. colleague being the fine gentleman that he is and
the caring spirit that he has would be appreciative of-
The Deputy Speaker: Resuming debate, the hon. member for
Lachine-Lac-Saint-Louis.
Mr. Clifford Lincoln (Lachine-Lac-Saint-Louis, Lib.): Mr.
Speaker, of course as Liberals we would have much preferred not
8384
to tackle the deficit and concentrate on social programs. Of course
as Liberals we would have much preferred to keep the research
budget as it was. Of course as Liberals we would have preferred to
beef up social programs. However, we were faced with a deficit of
over $44 billion that was crippling the country and making it
bankrupt.
(1350 )
All Canadians regardless of their political stripe, regardless of
their ideology recognized that something had to be done. This is
why today people have so much respect for the Minister of Finance
and the Prime Minister for having set the direction toward
balancing our finances and for having reduced the deficit of $44
billion by 57 per cent over the last three years. Today we can see
daylight. Our finances are getting back into shape and we are now
getting back to our roots as Liberals and we are looking at social
programs again.
[Translation]
I would like to concentrate on two programs especially dear to
my heart. First, I would like to talk about persons with disabilities.
With my colleague Andy Scott, whom I congratulate sincerely on
his extraordinary work, I had the privilege of participating in a
working group on persons with disabilities. Because of this group,
we based our approach on a broader perspective in society for
persons with disabilities, in terms of independent living and access
to work. Of the measures tabled by the Minister of Finance, some
seem pretty basic to us, but to people with disabilities, they are
vital to their independence.
There are tax credits of 20 per cent for vehicle conversion, and
50 per cent for the installation of an air conditioning unit vital to a
person's ability to breathe and carry on his or her life. There are
also the costs of adapting a residence, of assistants for those with
severe handicaps, of customs duties, which are now eliminated for
goods sent for people with handicaps really needing them.
These measures include an opportunities fund of $30 million
annually to ensure that the disabled are entitled to financial and
personal freedom and to full citizenship.
I know our detractors will say that $30 million annually is
peanuts. It is, however, a big step forward, a beginning. It is a new
start given that, in the past, we could not afford this luxury. Now, as
we see some balance in our finances, our thoughts turn first to
people with disabilities, children in poverty, research, innovation
and students-all needing our support.
The second measure I wish to talk about is our research and
development program. There is no reason to hide the fact, Canada
has fallen far behind the other countries in the OECD in terms of
research and development. If we look at the statistics, it is no secret
that Germany, England, France, the United States and Japan are far
ahead of us in this area.
This budget at least gives us a start. It shows the way the
government wants to go in the future. It is all very well for the
opposition to say that $180 million a year is nothing. However, the
$180 million will be spent in partnership with private enterprise,
with universities and research institutions so that it will be doubled
each year.
It has been said that we will be able to set up a research fund of
$2 billion in five years. They say this research fund is paltry.
However, according to Dr. Simard, the rector of the University of
Montreal, it is the response they were waiting for. According to Dr.
Shapiro, the president of McGill University, it will be of significant
help in the area of university research.
[English]
A few weeks ago I had the privilege of spending some hours at
the Montreal Neurological Institute, the famous institute founded
by Dr. Wilder Penfield. There I could sit with Dr. Murphy and Dr.
McPherson and Dr. Baxter and find out how much they crave for
research funds. Our research funding has been cut. We had no
choice. Now we must restore it. We must give the young scientists
who crave funding for grants a chance to shine again. We have in
Canada among our young research scientists the most brilliant in
the world.
(1355)
I visited the Montreal Neurological Institute and found that what
they are working on today is at the very forefront of progress in
medical research. They want to continue their work, to perfect it.
The only way they will perfect it, because funding is always a
problem, is to seek partnerships.
In the past, in their traditional sense, universities never sought
out private enterprise but today the university system is joining
with private enterprise. The Montreal Neurological Institute is
going to the Royal Bank for a partnership.
The funds which the government is extending will give a sense
of direction, a sense of leadership that we want to restore our
funding in research. We want to restore our funding in medical
research, in environmental research, in research in high
technology.
I salute the government for having taken this very forward step. I
know we need more research grants, more funding, but it will only
happen if we restore our finances first. Within the next few years,
once we have a budget deficit of $9 billion or less, we will be able
to fund research even more.
The budget will restore the faith of many people, many small l
liberals who want government to go back to its roots and fund
social programs. I am extremely proud that the government has
taken that route. Henceforth, all the funding that we will be able to
spare will be geared toward programs to help those who are most in
need.
8385
[Translation]
It is a Liberal budget. One that points the way to the future for
those who need us most. I am very proud of this budget, and I
strongly support the direction taken by the Minister of Finance. My
colleagues and I will push for continued movement in this
direction, for a return to our Liberal roots and for remembrance of
those who need us most.
[English]
The Speaker: We will now proceed to Statements by Members.
_____________________________________________
8385
STATEMENTS BY MEMBERS
[
English]
Mr. John English (Kitchener, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, I rise today
to pay tribute to a constituent in my riding of Kitchener, Ontario,
Marie France Paré.
Miss Paré, from École Cardinal-Léger, had the honour of
receiving the Mathieu Da Costa award for elementary French
writing. This award is relatively new and honours young people
who have illustrated through the arts the cultural diversity in our
society.
Miss Paré was recognized for her essay on Harriet Tubman. Her
essay brings to light this heroic individual and her contributions to
society. It also identifies the many cultures that are part of our
Canadian history.
Her writing skill coupled with her insightfulness brings to our
attention the diverse beginnings of Canadian society.
Like Mathieu Da Costa, Miss Paré illustrates the significant
impact people from all cultures have had and will have on this
country. I commend her and all the award recipients for bringing to
light the contributions of all cultures to our nation.
I wish to congratulate Miss Paré for this special award and wish
her all the best in her future endeavours.
* * *
Mr. Keith Martin (Esquimalt-Juan de Fuca, Ref.): Mr.
Speaker, this is health care platform progress note number two on
the state of our health care.
In my hometown of Victoria 160 people are on waiting lists for
radiation therapy. Of those people, 60 per cent are there for breast
cancer, 40 per cent are there for prostate cancer. The wait with
respect to breast cancer can be as long as 14 weeks. The response of
the provincial government has been to close down the expansion of
the cancer clinic. As well it is sending people to the United States.
In British Columbia waiting lists for cardiac surgery went from
385 in March to 500 in December.
This government has just put $300 million into health care after
ripping out and eviscerating $7 billion in transfer payments to the
provinces.
(1400)
It is this political party that continues to label itself the white
knight that pretends to be there for the sick, the poor and the
dispossessed, but the only white knight-
The Speaker: The hon. member for the Battlefords-Meadow
Lake.
* * *
Mr. Len Taylor (The Battlefords-Meadow Lake, NDP): Mr.
Speaker, the Minister of Finance yesterday stated that he no longer
believed that the so-called natural rate of unemployment in Canada
was as high as 8 per cent. This is a dramatic change for the Liberal
government which has repeatedly stated that it would not reduce
unemployment below 8 per cent because of the dangers of
inflation.
In doing so, the Liberals had attached themselves to the
anti-inflationary policies followed by the Bank of Canada which
the Liberals had attacked while in opposition. Those policies are
responsible for the size of Canada's public debt and the fact that
unemployment has remained above 9 per cent since the so-called
end of the last recession.
As the election approaches the Liberals want to wash their hands
of this terrible record on jobs by disowning the theory of the natural
rate of unemployment. But the 1.5 million unemployed Canadians
want to see in writing from the Minister of Finance that he will not
let the Bank of Canada stand in the way of job creation.
* * *
Mrs. Dianne Brushett (Cumberland-Colchester, Lib.): Mr.
Speaker, I am pleased to rise in this House today to congratulate the
Meredith Doyle Junior Ladies Curling Team from Truro, Nova
Scotia which became the national champions of junior ladies
curling last Sunday in Manitoba.
I salute Meredith Doyle, Beth Roach, Candace MacLean and
Tara Hamer for a terrific win against the Quebec team in the
nationally televised games. Their competitive spirit, determination
and commitment to excellence demonstrated their worthiness to
advance to the world junior championships. They will be great
ambassadors for Canada.
8386
I invite all members of this House to join me in wishing our
national champions the best of luck as they travel to Japan for the
world junior competition next month.
* * *
Mr. George S. Rideout (Moncton, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, last
Thursday movers and shakers in the international music industry
flocked to Moncton to take in some of Canada's most vibrant
music. For four days Moncton whooped it up. Blues, pops, fiddle
music, it was all there at the East Coast Music Awards.
[Translation]
We celebrated our down home music, in both official languages.
It was just great.
[English]
Demonstrating its cutting edge flare, organizers put the
extravaganza on the Internet. Between 10,000 and 12,000 people
visited the site every hour.
As we are all aware, Monctonians are held in high esteem for
their honesty. In all honesty I can say that the music awards were
superb.
[Translation]
My congratulations to all those who worked so hard to make this
event a huge success.
[English]
If you did not get to Moncton last week, all is not lost. On Friday,
February 28, CBC will air the East Coast Music Awards and you
can see for yourself how we in eastern Canada can do it up right.
* * *
Mr. Bernie Collins (Souris-Moose Mountain, Lib.): Mr.
Speaker, I would like to take this opportunity to congratulate the
Minister of Finance for presenting this House and this nation once
again with a sound and responsible federal budget.
Coming from a large, predominately rural constituency, the
budget measures that will help rural Canada are of particular
interest to me, for example the expansion of the community access
program by about $30 million, the $50 million equity infusion into
the BDC which will lever up to $250 million in new loans for
tourism, and the Farm Credit Corporation will be provided with an
additional $50 million.
Rural areas will also benefit from the funds provided in this
budget through the extension of the infrastructure program, youth
employment initiatives, small business enhancements and
innovation.
The minister recognizes that strength in rural Canada is vital to
our national well-being.
* * *
[
Translation]
Mrs. Maud Debien (Laval East, BQ): Mr. Speaker, on behalf
of the Bloc Quebecois, I want to note the passing, yesterday, at the
age of 92, of one the most prominent figures of modern China:
Deng Xiaoping.
This political figure ruled a country with a population of more
than one billion for some 15 years. Deng Xiaoping's achievements
include the decollectivization of rural communities, one of the
most painful legacies of communism. He also took on the
challenge of introducing a degree of economic liberalization,
without any political liberalization however.
Sadly, Deng Xiaoping leaves behind him the memory of the
Tiananmen Square massacre and systemic repression.
On behalf of our caucus, I would like to extend our condolences
to his family, and express the hope that, one day, the Chinese
people will achieve democracy.
* * *
(1405)
[English]
Mr. Elwin Hermanson (Kindersley-Lloydminster, Ref.):
Mr. Speaker, the minister of agriculture has concocted a strange
brew known as the barley plebiscite soup.
His recipe for democracy goes something like this. Take secret
polls and manipulate vigorously. Mix the debate that has been
simmering for over three years and then bring to a boil. Blend with
a fundamentally flawed question that ignores the wishes of a
majority of farmers. Add a trace of number coded mail-in ballots.
Cover up for two weeks and serve with a healthy dose of cynicism.
Clearly the minister's recipe serves only one, himself.
Farmers in western Canada believe they are being denied
scrutineers who would ensure the accuracy and integrity of the vote
and avoid the perception of bias.
If the Liberals try to deny farmers one of the most basic
fundamental rights of democracy by not allowing a proper
scrutineering process it will be the minister and his fellow Liberals
who will be roasted in the next election.
* * *
Mr. Mac Harb (Ottawa Centre, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, the 1997
budget announced the increase of the current child tax benefit to
8387
$6.1 billion. Over 1.4 million low Canadian families, about 2.5
million children, will see an increase in federal child benefit
payments by July 1998.
Through the national child benefit system we can ensure that
children in Canada live a healthy and happy life.
[Translation]
The provinces can now provide more efficient services and
programs to low income families by investing more in child care as
well as dental care and drug benefits for children.
The 1997 budget affirms our government's commitment to
children. Canadian values and priorities require us to invest in our
children. Our work will be done only when all children go to bed
with a smile on their face.
* * *
[
English]
Mr. Andy Scott (Fredericton-York-Sunbury, Lib.): Mr.
Speaker, I would like to thank my colleagues from Parry
Sound-Muskoka, Vancouver East and Lachine-Lac-Saint-Louis
for their contribution to the government's task force on disability
issues. I would also like to thank the observers, the working groups
and the more than 2,000 Canadians who put their faith in the task
force. Their confidence inspired our work.
Tuesday's budget demonstrated this government's renewed
commitment to Canadians with disabilities. The measures dealing
with the cost of disability and taxation as well as the new
opportunities fund are a first step in recognizing persons with
disabilities as equal citizens who aspire to the same quality of life
as all Canadians.
We are witnessing a new role for the federal government in this
area and I am pleased that the work of the task has made a
difference. We are in a better position than we were a year ago and I
want to encourage the government to continue to offer Canadians
with disabilities confidence, peace of mind and opportunities for
their future.
* * *
[
Translation]
Mr. Patrick Gagnon (Bonaventure-Îles-de-la-Madeleine,
Lib.): Mr. Speaker, I wish to inform this House that the Minister of
Labour has just announced, on behalf of his colleague, the Minister
of Human Resources Development, that $850,000 has been
awarded to the new MDF board plant in the Saguenay town of La
Baie.
Following the opening of the plant, this financial assistance
drawn directly from the transition job fund will create 98
permanent full time jobs as well as 245 indirect jobs in the region.
In addition, construction of the plant itself will generate
employment for 145 workers. This project, viewed as a priority for
the economic development of the region, will be carried out in
partnership with Uniboard Canada, which will provide the funding
required to complete this $128 million project.
We are proud to be directly associated with this project, which
will create permanent jobs in this high growth sector in the
Saguenay area.
* * *
Mr. Philippe Paré (Louis-Hébert, BQ): Mr. Speaker, on
December 1982, Vietnam became one of the 127 countries that
signed the 1966 International Covenant on Civil and Political
Rights. By signing this covenant, Vietnam agreed to comply with
certain international standards. However, that country is violating,
with full impunity, the rights of Tran Trieu Quan, as guaranteed
under that treaty.
Since the representations made by the government did not secure
Mr. Tran's freedom on humanitarian grounds, the Minister of
Foreign Affairs must now show political courage and confront the
Vietnamese government, by invoking international law.
Given that the Vietnamese courts seriously violated the
international standards outlined in the 1966 covenant, Canada has a
right to stand up for Mr. Tran.
Why has the Canadian government not yet lodged an official
protest, and what is it waiting for?
* * *
(1410)
[English]
Mr. Herb Grubel (Capilano-Howe Sound, Ref.): Mr.
Speaker, the Reform Party and I welcome to Canada today Vaclav
Klaus, Prime Minister of the Czech Republic.
Vaclav Klaus deserves the highest praise for three outstanding
achievements in his life. First, when his native country was ruled
with an iron fist by a communist regime, he had the courage to
advocate a democratic free society and economy for his country.
Second, he persuaded the people of his country of the merit of his
ideological vision and to elect him prime minister. Third, against
strong opposition from special interests he enacted free market
reforms, set free the creative energies of the Czech people and
made his country the most prosperous of the former Soviet Bloc.
8388
Welcome to Canada and three cheers for Vaclav Klaus and the
Czech people he represents.
* * *
Ms. Colleen Beaumier (Brampton, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, this
government is firmly committed to the Canada Health Act. The
budget reaffirmed this commitment. It introduced targeted
measures to ensure that Canadians will continue to enjoy the best
health care system in the world.
We announced the creation of the health transition fund to help
provinces assess new and better ways to provide health services.
One hundred and fifty million dollars will be allocated to provinces
on a per capita basis over a three year period.
The budget also provided $50 million for a Canada health
information system. This is a co-ordinated national information
system that will save many lives because health care workers
across the country will have the right information at the right time.
Finally, we increased funding to two existing programs, the
community action program for children and the Canada prenatal
nutrition program. By taking quick and decisive action on the
report of the national forum on health, this government has once
again demonstrated its ongoing commitment to Canada's health
care system, one of the pillars of Canadian society.
* * *
[
Translation]
Mr. Denis Paradis (Brome-Missisquoi, Lib.): Mr. Speaker,
the Quebec Minister of Finance just gave an eloquent
demonstration of his inability to give priority to the public interest
over his separatist obsession.
Let me explain a few things about the budget. The fact is that
Quebec receives 31 per cent of all federal transfers, while
accounting for only 25 per cent of Canada's population. It also
receives 46 per cent of equalization payments, through
government-to-government transfers.
Let us set the record straight. The $1.2 billion reduction in
transfer payments to Quebec will not have to be absorbed this year
alone; rather, it will be spread over a five-year period.
Separatists should stop looking for scapegoats and make a
commitment, as we did, to regain control over public finances and
get the economy back on track.
Mr. Stéphane Bergeron (Verchères, BQ): Mr. Speaker, last
fall, the Minister of Foreign Affairs sent a memo to diplomatic
missions accredited with Canada, demanding that diplomats
inform the department of any meeting with provincial ministers or
officials, here and abroad.
In a democratic country such as Canada, it is totally
unacceptable for the federal government to monitor contacts
between officials representing foreign countries and those
representing Quebec. Indeed, while our province is not named in
the memo, it is obviously the one that is targeted.
How can the federal government justify such behaviour? Would
the Liberals go so far as to take sanctions against countries that
would not comply with their directive?
This form of intimidation is not to Canada's credit. Does Ottawa
really believe that it will curb the legitimate aspirations of the
people of Quebec and disturb the lucidity of the international
community regarding the Quebec issue? If so, it is mistaken.
* * *
[
English]
Mr. Dick Harris (Prince George-Bulkley Valley, Ref.): Mr.
Speaker, on February 7 this House demonstrated its wisdom and
compassion when it unanimously adopted Motion No. 78.
This motion calls on the government to strengthen the impaired
driving sections of the Criminal Code in order to more
appropriately punish drunk drivers and to deter others who may
consider getting behind the wheel while impaired.
I brought this motion forward after a tragic driving accident that
claimed the lives of three family members in my community.
Impaired driving is the number one criminal cause of death and
injury in Canada.
My research and involvement with anti-drunk driving groups has
opened my eyes to the impaired driving epidemic in this country.
On average four people per day are killed by drunk drivers and over
three hundred are injured. This must stop. It is time the government
stopped treating impaired driving as simply another social ill.
I urge this House and the government to respect the wishes of
this House and act quickly on the principles of Motion No. 78 so
we can make our roadways and neighbourhoods safe again.
8389
8389
ORAL QUESTION PERIOD
(1415)
[Translation]
Mr. Gilles Duceppe (Laurier-Sainte-Marie, BQ): Mr.
Speaker, yesterday the Prime Minister explained to the media his
concept of federalism, a very unusual concept that is quite at odds
with last year's speech from the throne.
He told us that, if the federal government spends its time
invading provincial areas of jurisdiction, it is for their own good.
The Canadian government, he said, has always helped set up new
initiatives. It helps the provinces prepare programs, and then it
withdraws. The Prime Minister even added, and I quote: ``We
negotiate with standards. Sometimes, we move ahead, then there
are adjustments, but social progress must be achieved''. This is a
fine example of paternalistic federalism.
I ask the Minister of Finance whether he realizes that the budget
he has brought down reflects the policy denounced by the
provinces that allows the federal government to interfere in areas
of provincial jurisdiction. The federal government contributes a bit
of money, it sets national standards, imposes its priorities, forces
the provinces to comply and then withdraws, leaving the provinces
with responsibility for coming up with the money to finance its big
projects and the unpleasant task of making cuts.
Is this the Minister of Finance's new federalism?
Hon. Pierre S. Pettigrew (Minister of Human Resources
Development, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, I read with interest the
statement made yesterday by the Prime Minister, who was
commenting on the budget brought down by the Minister of
Finance.
What we saw, and I would like to confirm this today in the
House, should there be any ambiguity whatsoever, is the
government's commitment to the national child benefit, which is
an ongoing benefit. It is an ongoing benefit from our government to
assist children in low income families.
This is not a program one starts up and then pulls out of. It is a
program we have developed in partnership with the provinces that
is perfectly compatible with the Government of Quebec's family
policy.
As far as the national child benefit is concerned, I can reassure
you that this is an ongoing commitment on the part of the
Government of Canada.
Mr. Gilles Duceppe (Laurier-Sainte-Marie, BQ): Mr.
Speaker, we feel better already with such a promise. We have never
heard this in the past. It is quite new.
An hon. member: Is it the same as the GST?
Mr. Duceppe: The Minister of Finance claims that the federal
government is the source of progress. He and the Prime Minister
should admit that, last year and this year again, their government
cut $4.5 billion in social, health, and post-secondary education
programs, which represents $1.3 billion for Quebec alone.
How can the Minister of Finance boast about putting only $50
million this year into a program to fight child poverty, after such
cuts? Is that progress, $1.3 billion in cuts and $50 million in its
place?
Hon. Pierre S. Pettigrew (Minister of Human Resources
Development, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, I am sure that Quebec's
Minister of Finance, Mr. Landry, will put his 31 per cent of federal
transfer payments to the provinces to good use in his next budget.
Although we represent only 25 per cent of the population, 31 per
cent of federal transfer payments, and 46 per cent of equalization
payments, is not bad.
I think the Government of Quebec is not doing too badly.
Mr. Gilles Duceppe (Laurier-Sainte-Marie, BQ): Mr.
Speaker, when the minister talks about 31 per cent, he is including
tax points, as well as the money they are borrowing with our credit
card, in our name, that we are obliged to pay later on.
When he talks about equalization payments and the fact that we
receive more in UI, he should be ashamed. If Quebec receives more
in UI, it is perhaps because there is higher unemployment in
Quebec. He seems to be proud of this. It is hard to believe.
Getting back to the Prime Minister, who has been saying some
very interesting things lately. He was explaining to the French
Prime Minister, Jacques Chirac, that it is much easier in Canada
than in France to cut social and health services, because the
decisions are made in Ottawa and the provinces are stuck with the
actual dirty work. Federalism is so wonderful.
(1420)
Is the Minister of Finance aware that it is irresponsible of the
federal government to place the provinces in an unstable position
by forcing them to cut direct public services? Is he aware of that?
Hon. Pierre S. Pettigrew (Minister of Human Resources
Development, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, the Government of Canada has
cut some of its own programs. We have carried out two program
reviews and made cuts to federal government programs. We have
also reduced the number of federal public servants by 50,000.
It is easy to whine all the time and pretend to be the victim, the
worst off of all the victims of the Canadian federation. I would like
8390
to draw the attention of the opposition and of the Government of
Quebec to the fact that Quebec still receives the largest federal
transfer payment of any Canadian province relative to its budget.
Quebec derives considerable benefit from being in the Canadian
federation, and we have no problem with that.
Some hon. members: Oh, oh.
Mrs. Francine Lalonde (Mercier, BQ): Mr. Speaker, if the
Minister of Human Resources Development were more familiar
with his history, he would not ask the questions he just has, for
poverty has its historical and political causes.
The Minister of Finance has decided that the children of Quebec
and Canada would remain poor. Yet, he managed to squeeze out a
tear during his budget speech. He has, however, forgotten that he
and his government had done a good deal to impoverish families.
He has added a mere $50 million to the pot.
How can the Minister of Finance boast of his compassion, which
I would have been glad to see him show toward poor children,
when his so-called $50 million effort means only another $33 per
year per child living in poverty in Quebec and in Canada?
Hon. Pierre S. Pettigrew (Minister of Human Resources
Development, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, from-
Mr. Bellehumeur: The tables of the rich, a few crumbs.
Mr. Pettigrew: They can always be considered crumbs, but if
you start by looking at the figures-
Mr. Bellehumeur: It is outrageous, 500,000 more poor children
since you have been in power.
Mr. Pettigrew: -we have added $70 million to the $195
million we had already committed in this fiscal year. The amount
we have committed, one that is permanent and will be repeated
yearly for many years, the most important national social project
for decades, a project in partnership with the provinces, which will
add $850 million yearly for the benefit of children in low income
families, is a magnificent commitment on the part of the
government.
Mrs. Francine Lalonde (Mercier, BQ): Mr. Speaker, there was
more money in 1984, in today's dollars, in assistance to children,
for the number of children there were at that time, than there is in
this budget.
Why does the Minister of Finance want to be at the top of the
G-7 when it comes to deficit reduction, while he does not mind
being at the bottom of the OECD countries when it comes to
helping children living in poverty?
Hon. Pierre S. Pettigrew (Minister of Human Resources
Development, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, this is like comparing apples
and oranges. In 1984, there was a family allowance system which
went to all households. It was a universal program, one which
many governments before us had questioned.
If, however, we look at the situation and the way it has developed
in recent years, I think that our government's commitment to
children of low income families is one that is solid, significant, and
aimed at low income families, unlike the family allowance, a
universal program from another era, which we revised when we did
a general tidying up of Canada's public finances to the benefit,
incidentally, of all the administrations and all the companies in this
country.
[English]
Miss Deborah Grey (Beaver River, Ref.): Mr. Speaker,
yesterday I pointed out that over the past five years the finance
minister's tax revenues have gone up by 30 per cent, while the take
home pay of Canadians has gone down by 10 per cent.
(1425 )
``Not to worry,'' he said, ``those increased tax revenues were a
result of the incredible economic growth''. Could it be that all the
great economic growth explains why Canadians are $3,000 poorer,
why 1.5 million Canadians are unemployed and why one in four
Canadians are worried about losing their jobs?
I ask the finance minister this. Can he explain why all this
supposed economic growth has made the government 30 per cent
richer and Canadian families 10 per cent poorer? How does it add
up?
Hon. Paul Martin (Minister of Finance, Lib.): Mr. Speaker,
the hon. member will know that at the time we took office, there
was an enormous amount of insecurity in the country. Canada had
come through the deepest and longest recession since the
depression of the 1930s. Taxes were going up, interest rates were
skyrocketing and there was an enormous loss of confidence among
business and consumers.
Three years later, 798,000 more jobs were created in the private
sector, consumer confidence is on the way up, business confidence
is on the way up and every international organization in the world,
the OECD, the IMF and the World Bank, are saying that this is
where the economic miracle of the world is taking place.
Canadians are very proud of what is going on here. They really
do not like to see people knock the country.
Miss Deborah Grey (Beaver River, Ref.): Mr. Speaker, right
now the people who are upset are those who have existing
bankruptcies, which are up 60 per cent. I am not sure they would be
bragging about the budget.
In the finance minister's world, a $3,000 pay cut for families is
defined as economic growth and a 70 per cent pay hike in payroll
taxes is considered an investment.
In April 1995 the minister's department released a study-I will
table it if he would like me to-which concluded that a 40 per cent
increase in CPP premiums between 1986 and 1993 had killed
26,000 jobs.
8391
My question is for the Minister of Finance. Has his department
figured out the negative impact that this 70 per cent increase in
CPP premiums will have on jobs? It was 40 per cent before, and
now it will be a 70 per cent increase in these pay hikes. How many
jobs will that lose, not create?
Hon. Paul Martin (Minister of Finance, Lib.): Mr. Speaker,
obviously it takes a great deal to explain to the Reform Party the
difference between a tax and pension contribution.
Yesterday I pointed out that what the Reform Party was
recommending in its changes to pension contributions was the
Chilean model which was 13 per cent, some $500 more than the
federal government and provinces have come together on.
I wanted to be fair to the Reform Party. Therefore I went back to
see if I could find out whether they had made a lower
recommendation. Remember that the provinces and the federal
government have agreed to 9.9 per cent. The lowest
recommendation I could find from Reform was 10 per cent.
Let me quote from Reform's minority report from Standing
Committee on Human Resources Development social security
review. It says that in Chile the local version of CPP has been
phased out and replaced by mandatory RRSPs, financed by a
payroll deduction of 10 per cent. That is the lowest that they have
come up with-
Some hon. members: Oh, oh.
Miss Deborah Grey (Beaver River, Ref.): Mr. Speaker, by
Canadians being able to put into their expanded RRSP program,
they will get exactly double what the government offers in any
pension scheme.
The same study that was done by Joe Italiano in the minister's
department also examined the impact that payroll taxes had on
wages. It is one thing for the minister to say that this is an
investment. For the employers who are kicking out another 70 per
cent of taxes on premiums for their workers, this is what his
department came up with, not some Reformer, regarding wages.
``Employers, that is the people who hire and pay the employees,
try to pass the increased cost of higher payroll taxes on to
employees through lower wages''. Somehow that does not sound
like a great investment.
(1430)
Since Canadians have already suffered a $3,000 pay cut under
this Liberal government, how much more than $3,000 will they
lose now that the finance minister has increased payroll taxes by 70
per cent?
Hon. Paul Martin (Minister of Finance, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, it
is very difficult to understand how members of the Reform Party
can stand up day after day, swallow themselves whole and bring
forward positions that are in total contradiction to what they have
stated consistently in House of Commons committees or in this
House.
I made a reference to the 10 per cent increase. That was the
lowest number that I could see.
Let us look at what Reform has actually recommended. This is a
quote from the Reform Party's social security review and the
option which it recommends: ``The schedule of planned increases
to the CPP payroll tax'', which they called it, ``could be maintained
or somewhat accelerated with the excess funds being diverted into
contributors' personal super RRSP funds''.
What Reform is recommending on paper is the acceleration of
the contributions up to a level of 14.2 per cent.
[Translation]
Mrs. Suzanne Tremblay (Rimouski-Témiscouata, BQ): Mr.
Speaker, my question is directed to the Minister of Finance.
In his budget, the minister announced the creation of the Canada
Foundation for Innovation to invest in R & D infrastructures.
However, as in the case of most of the measures announced in this
budget, on the eve of an election the minister is putting money back
into an area where he previously made massive cuts, as in the case
of the Tokamak reactor in Varennes.
How can the minister create a federal foundation when he has
already cut more than $3.3 billion in transfer payments to the
provinces for health and post-secondary education and more than
$100 million in funding for research councils? These are radical
cuts that have already seriously undermined research in
universities and hospitals.
Hon. John Manley (Minister of Industry, Minister for the
Atlantic Canada Opportunities Agency, Minister of Western
Economic Diversification and Minister responsible for the
Federal Office of Regional Development-Quebec, Lib.): Mr.
Speaker, the position taken today by the hon. member for the Bloc
Quebecois is a rather interesting one.
I can quote some comments by Denis Gagnon, vice rector of
Laval University. He said: ``I think it was very good news
yesterday for universities and teaching hospitals that do research.
Excellent news at last that we may be entitled to assistance in
developing our research infrastructures''.
He also said: ``The federal government is involved, but it is
looking for what it calls a partner in any commitment it will make,
and it will be up to us to work with these partners''.
[English]
David Johnston, former head of McGill university said: ``We can
establish-''
8392
[Translation]
Mrs. Suzanne Tremblay (Rimouski-Témiscouata, BQ): Mr.
Speaker, if the minister is willing, we could send him some quotes
which are the exact opposite of the ones he happened to choose.
These are ten times worse.
Does the minister, who has cut at least one half billion annually
from research and development budgets, not realize that $180
million is peanuts compared with the promise in the red book
which would add $1 billion annually for science and technology?
Hon. John Manley (Minister of Industry, Minister for the
Atlantic Canada Opportunities Agency, Minister of Western
Economic Diversification and Minister responsible for the
Federal Office of Regional Development-Quebec, Lib.): Mr.
Speaker, first of all, the hon. member is quite wrong. Apparently
she cannot read. Perhaps she should go back to the red book. She
would see that our commitment was to invest $1 billion in science
and technology during our mandate. By creating the Foundation for
Innovation we have already invested $800 million.
We also created Technology Partnerships Canada, whose budget,
starting next year, will be $250 million annually, and this is stable
funding.
(1435)
Today we announced the renewal of the national network of
centres of excellence as a permanent program with $47 million in
funding. We announced other investments in the budget.
* * *
[
English]
Mr. Monte Solberg (Medicine Hat, Ref.): Mr. Speaker, any
reform of CPP must reflect fairness for all Canadians. If a 20 year
old person invested CPP contributions in an RRSP at an average
return of about 7 per cent he or she would have an nest egg of over a
million dollars. That would give an annual retirement income over
double what is being offered under the Liberal CPP plan.
How can the minister justify forcing young people to contribute
to a plan that would have to rank as one of the worst investment
schemes on the planet?
Hon. Paul Martin (Minister of Finance, Lib.): Mr. Speaker,
the projections that have been made by the federal government and
the provinces are quite prudent. Again I point out that all 10
provinces are joint stewards in the Canada pension plan.
If the Canada pension plan was to earn higher rates, and there is
no reason why it should not given the fact that it will be subject
exactly to the same investment criteria as any private sector
pension plan, then clearly the returns will be higher.
Let us point out some of the fundamental differences the super
RRSP will not have. CPP benefits are fully indexed. They are
secure. They provide disability benefits. If somebody has an
accident under the Canada pension plan they will be protected.
What Reform would do is throw those who have bad luck, who
have accidents, on to the market with no help. Let us understand
what it means. Under the Canada pension plan survivor benefits
will be provided. As well, under the Canada pension plan women
having children who have to retire from the workforce for a period
of time are protected. Under the Reform plan there is no such
protection.
Mr. Monte Solberg (Medicine Hat, Ref.): Mr. Speaker, the
finance minister is making lyin' Brian look good.
Some hon. members: Oh, oh.
Some hon. members: Withdraw.
The Speaker: I caution members again about using
inflammatory words. I would like the hon. member to withdraw
these words ``lyin' Brian'' and to put his question directly, please.
Mr. Solberg: Mr. Speaker, I withdraw. The Liberal record is a 17
per cent jobless rate for Canada's youth and now under the guise of
CPP reform-
Some hon. members: Oh, oh.
The Speaker: Put the question, please.
Mr. Solberg: Mr. Speaker, on the one hand why is the
government breaking its jobs promise to Canada's youth and on the
other hand if they ever do get a job forcing them to pay higher and
higher taxes for ever diminishing benefits?
Hon. Paul Martin (Minister of Finance, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, let
us put the debate over the Canada pension plan in perspective.
We have already seen that the difference of opinion between
ourselves and the Reform Party has nothing to do with the CPP
premiums. We have already seen that on the three basic options put
forward by the Reform Party, one of 10 per cent, one of 13 per cent
and one of 14.2 per cent, in all cases Reform are recommending
higher CPP premiums than the federal government and the
provinces. We understand that.
(1440 )
Therefore what we must deal with is what is the fundamental
difference of opinion between ourselves and the Reform. It has to
do with the values of this country. It has to do with do you believe
that Canadians feel a collective responsibility one for the other? Do
you believe that Canadians do not think this is a country only for
the rich? Do you believe that what this country is all about is
providing for Canadians on disability, providing for single
mothers, providing for survivors? We do.
8393
[Translation]
Mr. Antoine Dubé (Lévis, BQ): Mr. Speaker, my question is for
the Acting Prime Minister.
Despite his attempts to exert pressure, the secretary of state
responsible for regional development in Quebec has failed. The
Minister of Health this week tabled a number of minor
amendments to his tobacco bill, which simply put the problem off
until after the election. All the organizers of sporting and cultural
events are angry and disappointed at the work done by the secretary
of state in the matter of sponsorships.
Will the Acting Prime Minister acknowledge that, despite the
fine words of the secretary of state for Quebec, the government has
found no other way to ensure the viability of sporting and cultural
events in Quebec and Canada?
[English]
Mr. Joseph Volpe (Parliamentary Secretary to Minister of
Health, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, the member is completely off base.
The minister has responded to committee recommendations, a
committee of which the hon. member was a participant. The
minister has said: ``All right, I will consider what the
recommendations of the committee are, first of all, that the
legislation passed as it was and second, I will take into
consideration some of the concerns with respect to a transitional
period in order to accommodate the concerns of all of those who
depended on advertising''. He has done that.
The minister has also taken into consideration the overwhelming
opinion of the Canadian public that this is a health bill and that as a
health bill it shall pass unchanged. The minister has also said: ``I
will be reasonable. I will receive further representations''. He has
received them and he has presented amendments that reflect
weighing those recommendations in the balance.
[Translation]
Mr. Antoine Dubé (Lévis, BQ): Mr. Speaker, I do not know
how the parliamentary secretary can say that, when the minister
refused to meet representatives of the sponsors.
On October 22, the Prime Minister said before the Chamber of
Commerce in Montreal, and I quote: ``By working in a spirit of
co-operation, we can put Montreal back on its feet. We have no
choice, we must succeed''.
Are we to understand that his work on behalf of Montreal is
limited to adopting a bill that threatens more than 2,000 jobs and
over $90 million in economic benefits there?
[English]
Mr. Joseph Volpe (Parliamentary Secretary to Minister of
Health, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, I am not sure it is very constructive to
engage in these kinds of scare tactics. The legislation, and the hon.
member has read it well, does not prohibit advertising. There are
restrictions to the application of advertising, restrictions to which
the advertising agencies around the world and especially in North
America agree should be in place.
The member also knows there are even more severe restrictions
in the United States. In fact, as of next year there will be an outright
ban. No such thing is happening in Canada.
For the edification of the hon. member and for the information of
this House I would like to draw to the member's attention what the
Minister of Health in Quebec said about advertising which I will
quote for the member's benefit. I will table it if the member would
like. It says:
(1445)
[Translation]
The minister said this: ``Sponsorship is subliminal advertising.
Cultural products are associated with a brand of cigarettes. This is a
very strong way to encourage smoking, especially among young
people''.
[English]
The Speaker: The hon. member for Edmonton Southwest.
* * *
Mr. Ian McClelland (Edmonton Southwest, Ref.): Mr.
Speaker, first I would caution the Minister of Finance not to speak
too loudly of Reform ideas because it usually takes about a year for
a Reform idea to end up being Liberal policy, as we all know.
Catherine Swift, the president of the Canadian Federation of
Independent Business, wrote a letter to the Canada pension plan
review committee. In it she wrote: ``Increases in CPP premiums to
as high as 10 per cent would be massively disruptive to small
business finances and employment levels''. The premium increase
announced by the Minister of Finance to 9.9 per cent will cost a
company with 100 employees $130,000.
Where will that money come from to pay this increase in taxes?
Why will the government not link an increase in CPP premiums to
a decrease in the UI premiums?
Hon. Paul Martin (Minister of Finance, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, let
us simply contrast in terms of the CPP premiums with differing
tracks between what the Liberals and the provinces have said
together versus what the Reform plan is.
8394
Instead of it going up to 14 per cent and then continuing, under
the federal government and the provincial plan, the premiums are
going to go up to 9.9 per cent and then they are going to level
off. We will then have a fuller funded plan. What Reform is
suggesting under what appears to be the most real of its options
is that there would be an acceleration of those premiums up to
14.2 per cent.
How the hon. member can stand in this House and try to
convince people that 14.2 per cent is less than 9.9 per cent can only
be done in that weird little corner of the world where Reformers do
their arithmetic.
Mr. Ian McClelland (Edmonton Southwest, Ref.): Mr.
Speaker, on behalf of Canadians, what we are trying to do is to link
the very real damage done to employment by payroll taxes and the
fact that payroll taxes have to come down.
We all understand that the Canada pension plan is a basket case.
Everybody knows that. The problem is that for new people coming
into the plan it must be fair. For businesses that now have to try to
maintain a payroll we have to keep them from going broke. For the
vast majority of businesses there is only one place the money can
come from. According to the same CFIB survey, 49 per cent of
small businesses with five employees are operating at break even
or loss positions which means that the last person hired will be the
first person fired.
How many small businesses will be forced to close as a direct
result of this payroll tax increase? That is the problem.
Hon. Paul Martin (Minister of Finance, Lib.): Mr. Speaker,
the hon. member has just referred to the Canada pension plan as a
basket case. One must understand what he is saying. The federal
government along with eight of the provinces, provinces which
reflect the vast range of the political spectrum in this country,
provinces which reflect all of the regions of this country have come
together with the federal government to protect the Canada pension
plan so that it will be there for young Canadians.
To refer to the Canada pension plan as a basket case could only
come if one adopts an extremist view. We understand that is exactly
what we are dealing with. The basic difference here is not between
Reform and the government. It is between a balanced view of what
Canadian society is all about and about a band of extremists who
would destroy the values of the country.
* * *
[
Translation]
Mr. Michel Bellehumeur (Berthier-Montcalm, BQ): Mr.
Speaker, my question is for the Minister of Intergovernmental
Affairs.
This week, Quebec's Liberal Party leader Daniel Johnson said he
would not support the amendment to section 93 of the Constitution
sought by the Quebec government, because, in his opinion, the fact
that up to four other provinces could be involved increases the
likelihood of failure.
(1450)
Just yesterday, however, the minister stated unequivocally that
section 93 could be amended bilaterally on the basis of the proposal
made by the Quebec government.
Who are we to believe, the minister across the way or the leader
of the Liberal Party in Quebec?
Hon. Stéphane Dion (President of the Queen's Privy Council
for Canada and Minister of Intergovernmental Affairs, Lib.):
Mr. Speaker, I will have to repeat the three basic points made from
the very beginning by the Government of Canada in this matter.
First, on the face of it, what the Government of Quebec is
proposing appears to be feasible, bilaterally, under section 43 of the
Constitution Act of 1982 amending formula.
Second, the Government of Quebec must build a consensus
around its proposal. Incidentally, my Quebec counterpart, Jacques
Brassard, is now saying the exact same thing as I am, thereby
contradicting the opposition in this respect.
Third, this is a matter that must be debated by the provincial
legislature before being referred to the Parliament of Canada. That
was what happened in each of the four previous bilateral
amendments.
Mr. Michel Bellehumeur (Berthier-Montcalm, BQ): Mr.
Speaker, in light of the 180 degree turnabout and the glaring
inconsistency of his friend and ally, Daniel Johnson, is the Minister
of Intergovernmental Affairs telling us that, until the leader of the
Liberal Party in Quebec sees the light and stops putting
partisanship before the interests of Quebec as a whole, he will
consider that there is no consensus in Quebec to proceed
bilaterally?
Hon. Stéphane Dion (President of the Queen's Privy Council
for Canada and Minister of Intergovernmental Affairs, Lib.):
Mr. Speaker, the leader of the official opposition made another
suggestion that may well reduce the likelihood of a court challenge.
It is up to the Quebec government to determine whether this is the
best solution and to discuss the matter with the leader of the official
opposition.
I think that the official opposition in the House of Commons now
realizes that a consensus is required. So far, it had always
maintained that all we had to do was to accept a proposal put
forward by the Government of Quebec.
8395
[English]
Mr. Roger Gallaway (Sarnia-Lambton, Lib.): Mr. Speaker,
there are a number of groups and individuals who want to use herbs
and other natural products for medical purposes. They are
suggesting that Health Canada unreasonably forbids the
importation of some rather innocuous health products.
My question is for the Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister of
Health. Does Health Canada in fact publish statements as to why
certain products are or are not allowed in and is there an appeal
process when entry is denied?
Mr. Joseph Volpe (Parliamentary Secretary to Minister of
Health, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, members of the House will know that
Health Canada's priority is to ensure that products which are put up
for sale are both safe and effective.
Every year the department authorizes several hundred uses of
traditional herbal remedies and vitamin and mineral supplements.
We have also dealt with a series of other items that have been less
than safe. I cite as an example remedies containing ephedrine
which were responsible for a number of serious illnesses in
Canada. As a result a ban was imposed on the use of Ephedra in
certain products.
Health Canada does permit the importation of products that meet
regulatory requirements. In the event that products are prohibited,
all importers can appeal to the department for a review. The review
process is an open one.
* * *
Mr. John Williams (St. Albert, Ref.): Mr. Speaker, not only is
the Minister of Finance going to hike the CPP tax by 70 per cent for
working people, but let us look at what he is going to do for the
retired folk.
Under the minister's proposed new rules the old age security is
gone. The guaranteed income supplement is going to be gone. The
$3,500 seniors tax free allowance is gone and the $1,000 tax free
pension income for seniors is gone.
Will the Minister of Finance tell us why he has killed these four
pillars of financial security for seniors so that he can brag about his
budget?
Hon. Paul Martin (Minister of Finance, Lib.): Mr. Speaker,
the government by bringing in the new seniors benefit has brought
in a benefit that is going to be fully indexed, a benefit that is going
to be tax free and a benefit which will benefit 75 per cent of
Canadian seniors, nine out of ten single women. It is a benefit that
is going to target those who need it most, certainly people who will
never vote for Reform.
(1455 )
Mr. John Williams (St. Albert, Ref.): Mr. Speaker, let us look
at the new seniors benefit that he is so proud of. If a senior only has
a seniors benefit and the Canada pension plan, if that is all the
senior has, the Minister of Finance would take back half the
Canada pension plan. Let him tell us why that is fair.
Hon. Paul Martin (Minister of Finance, Lib.): Mr. Speaker,
that is simply not true.
The main issue we should really address is why, with all of the
problems and the opportunities this country has, the Reform Party
has taken up all of question period with one goal in mind: to
destroy the help that will be given to low income seniors and to
destroy the Canada pension plan. What is it deep in the hearts of
Reformers that would destroy the social security programs upon
which Canadians rely? Why? It has been an hour of basic-
The Speaker: The hon. member for Bellechasse.
* * *
[
Translation]
Mr. François Langlois (Bellechasse, BQ): Mr. Speaker, my
question is for the Minister of National Defence.
On Tuesday, the Minister of National Defence finally admitted
that he and his colleague in External Affairs had received a report
concerning the allegations that a Quebec diplomat in Washington
was spied upon by Canadian military attachés.
Out of a concern for transparency and in order to get to the
bottom of this matter, is the minister prepared to make that report
public?
[English]
Hon. Lloyd Axworthy (Minister of Foreign Affairs, Lib.): Mr.
Speaker, I would simply refer the hon. member to the reports that
appeared this morning where the lawyer for Mr. Keener who had
made that allegation said that the allegation was simply false. That
should clear up the point which we made in the House, that this
whole allegation was absurd. Now the lawyer of the person who
said it in the first place has said that it simply is absurd.
* * *
Mr. Jack Frazer (Saanich-Gulf Islands, Ref.): Mr. Speaker,
according to the defence minister, everybody knows what
happened in Somalia so we do not need the inquiry commission.
Since the minister knows, perhaps he can tell us why no military
police were sent to investigate the March 4 shooting, or why Major
8396
Armstrong's medical report was ignored. Perhaps he can tell us
whether Bob Fowler really did blackmail Kim Campbell and
whether generals interfered with an investigation.
Since the minister knows the answers, will he tell Canadians
what they are? If not, why is he so determined to avoid learning the
truth?
Hon. Douglas Young (Minister of National Defence and
Minister of Veterans Affairs, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, of course the
elements that are raised by my hon. friend are important. That is
why the Somalia commission of inquiry has been working now for
nearly two years. By the end of June, after three extensions, it will
have caused some $25 million to have been spent.
With respect to the specific incidents that occurred in Somalia
which the hon. member refers to, I hope that after all of this work
the conclusions and the recommendations of the Somalia
commission of inquiry will be useful to all Canadians, including
the hon. member and the government.
* * *
Ms. Paddy Torsney (Burlington, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, the
Baha'is in my community and countless Canadians are repelled by
the news of death sentences passed on Baha'is in Iran. A few days
ago Iran raised the bounty on Salman Rushdie's head to $2.5
million.
I ask the Minister of Foreign Affairs, what is Canada's reaction
to this latest outrage and to human rights abuses that continue in
Iran?
Hon. Lloyd Axworthy (Minister of Foreign Affairs, Lib.): Mr.
Speaker, let me say on behalf of the government and all Canadians
that these decisions are simply outrageous and we have to do
everything we can to try to counter them.
I will be meeting this afternoon with representatives of the
Baha'i community to talk about how we might work together with
them to respond. I have written to the foreign minister of Iran to
say that this should be stopped. I will be in contact with the
president of the European Union to see if we can mount a common
front against what is really an outrageous situation. I can promise
the hon. member we will do everything we can to stop these
actions.
* * *
Mr. Len Taylor (The Battlefords-Meadow Lake, NDP): Mr.
Speaker, earlier today New Democratic Party leader Alexa
McDonough urged the Liberals to reverse plans hidden in
Tuesday's budget. These budget plans will result in cuts to the
benefits for some 288,000 children of the working poor in this
country.
Given that the minister says he wants to help the children of
Canada's working poor, why is he actually taking money away
from them?
(1500 )
Hon. Pierre S. Pettigrew (Minister of Human Resources
Development, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, the leader of the NDP is
absolutely wrong. No child in this country will receive less money
this year than they received last year. That is absolutely clear.
Some people wished to be transferred from a per family to a per
child situation. One child families will still receive more money,
not as much as we had hoped and was promised in the earlier
budget, but they will receive more money than they did last year. It
is a matter of fairness to go to a per child situation instead of per
family.
We are doing a good job for next year's national child benefit.
* * *
The Speaker: I draw the attention of hon. members to the
presence in the gallery of His Excellency Vaclav Klaus, Prime
Minister of the Czech Republic.
Some hon. members: Hear, hear.
* * *
[
Translation]
Mrs. Suzanne Tremblay (Rimouski-Témiscouata, BQ): Mr.
Speaker, I would like to ask the usual Thursday question. Can the
government tell us what will be on the agenda when we return in
two weeks?
[English]
Mr. Paul Zed (Parliamentary Secretary to Leader of the
Government in the House of Commons, Lib.): Mr. Speaker,
starting tomorrow the government will call the report stage of Bill
C-71, the tobacco bill; Bill C-66, the labour code amendments; and
Bill C-67, the competition legislation.
We would also like, at an early date, to complete second reading
of Bill C-46, the Criminal Code amendments, and Bill C-49, the
administrative tribunals bill.
8397
8397
GOVERNMENT ORDERS
[
English]
The House resumed consideration of the motion that this House
approves in general the budgetary policy of the government; the
amendment, and the amendment to the amendment.
Mr. Taylor: Mr. Speaker, I rise on a point of order. When the
debate concluded prior to question period an hon. member had just
finished speaking and there had not been time for questions and
comments. I am wondering if you are about to call questions and
comments.
The Speaker: The hon. member is absolutely correct. The hon.
member for Lachine-Lac-Saint-Louis had five minutes for
questions and comments. I was about to call for that before we
proceed with debate.
Are there questions or comments?
Mr. Len Taylor (The Battlefords-Meadow Lake, NDP): Mr.
Speaker, I appreciate the opportunity to direct a question to the hon.
member from Quebec, with whom I have served on the
environment committee and for whom I have a great deal of
respect.
The hon. member spoke at great length about funding for
research and development, for technologies and for other things. I
am greatly disappointed that the federal budget did not announce
additional funding for green plan moneys that have expired. Green
plan moneys previously funded a lot of projects on the prairies for
land preservation and conservation, and water and air conservation.
Many rural residents, farmers in particular, benefited a great deal
from the funds which were available for research and conservation
projects.
My first question of two is: Does the member believe that at
some point we should see a return of this kind of funding? Second,
about 16 per cent of agricultural research and development money
over the past three years has been withdrawn. I wonder if the
member, who is committed to research and development, would
not like to see the replacement of that 16 per cent to research and
development in agriculture.
(1505)
Mr. Lincoln: Mr. Speaker, naturally all of us want to see
restoration of previous funding in the areas of environment and
agriculture. At the same time, we face realities. We have had to cut
substantially in government expenses. When government
expenses, the deficit, are cut by 57 per cent over three years, the
cutbacks are significant.
The budget sets a sense of direction. One government priority is
innovation, research. It has earmarked the research foundation for
the next five years even though it is subject to partnership with
private enterprise, with the economic world so that hopefully it will
produce $2 billion over five years.
Naturally, when finances are restored to the government, I hope
there will be much more funding for the environment, whether it is
in the form of the previous green plan which was criticized as being
too unfocused. We need something focused, something that
addresses the issue of scientific research in the environment
especially. Yes, I would be all for this. The Minister of Finance
shares this goal as well.
[Translation]
Mrs. Francine Lalonde (Mercier, BQ): Mr. Speaker, a budget,
particularly one which we know is a pre-election budget, indicates
a party's profound sense of attachment to its ideals. Now, what
does this budget really present us with? This budget tells all those
people who have paid dearly to reduce the deficit-generally, those
people and those regions and provinces which can least afford
it-``You are going to have to keep on paying''.
The budget speech is full of praise and self-congratulation for
the new economic indicators which ought supposedly to create jobs
on their own, without the government having to put anything into
employment.
Now the same people who have had to bear the brunt of the
deficit reduction are the ones cruelly deprived of jobs, which would
put an end to their needing the various social programs. But what
does the government do in this connection? It announces a new
infrastructure program, it announces a project for investing in
research and development, but these measures are not in the least
sufficient to deal with the problems involved.
The budget also shows a certain degree of cynicism, since there
is no indication whatsoever that the unemployment insurance fund
surplus is liable to stop growing.
Finally, after having shed a tear over child poverty, the budget
says that, this year, the government will invest $50 million.
(1510)
I will expand on these points. There are more. My colleagues
talked about federal intrusion. I want to emphasize these particular
points because they affect ordinary people. I wish there were a
better word, but I have yet to find one.
Ordinary people are those who need social programs, average
citizens. We are all ordinary people but when we use this expres-
8398
sion, I think of those who know they have no power, no wealth, no
RRSP and often no house. These are the people who need the
government, who need social programs.
So what do these people see nowadays? They see that instead of
improving their lives, instead of being able to count on the
programs they urgently need, this budget announces that they will
continue to experience severe cuts in funding. I am referring to the
people of Quebec. They will continue to experience severe cuts in
funding for health care, education and social programs.
And they will continue to experience the full impact of
employment insurance reform, a shameful misnomer. In fact, they
will not be able to count on any help at all. This is outrageous,
when we consider the employment insurance fund. Since the
Liberals came to power, the employment insurance fund has
annually collected $4 billion or $5 billion more than it distributed
in benefits.
This year, the surplus is expected to be $5.8 billion. These
figures are shocking because they tell us that although the
government expects to spend $13.5 billion on benefits, it will
collect $19.3 billion, and $5.8 billion over $13.5 is something like
43 per cent. This is outrageous. This is highway robbery and
misappropriation of funds. It is intolerable that only workers and
the businesses that employ them should pay this special premium
to reduce the deficit.
However, the minister is delighted. Did you hear that? The
minister is delighted because he managed to reduce unemployment
insurance premiums. He is delighted with the fact that he reduced
costs. He is delighted with the fact he reduced the deficit. He did
not say that this deficit reduction was largely paid for by workers
earning up to $39,000, no more. People who work overtime and
earn really big salaries do not pay a cent. Businesses that employ
people and pay them up to $39,000 are the people who, since
Liberals came to power, have paid for most of the reduction of the
deficit.
There are really no words to express how unproductive this is
from the economic point of view and how unfair it is to the people
themselves. In fact, it would make any citizen indignant. I have no
hesitation in showing my indignation, because I see it everywhere
in my riding as do all hon. members in this House, who can testify
to the general indignation of the public.
(1515)
The Conservative government's withdrawal of the $2 billion
paid by the main budget for job training from the unemployment
insurance fund had major consequences. Three years later, there
was a $6 billion deficit in the fund-three times $2 billion. Because
the government was no longer responsible for this area, the
unemployment insurance had to pay. Workers and businesses had
to pay for job training.
However, since the Liberals came to power, things have been
quite incredible. Now, the consolidated fund, the main budget, has
little to do with job training, help and active measures, everything
comes out of the unemployment insurance fund. In fact, the
Minister of Human Resources Development's reform had the effect
of having the unemployment insurance fund pay for what
previously came out of the consolidated fund.
In other words, this is so twisted that the scandal rages on while
all the members on the government side gloat. However, it makes
no sense that the deficit reduction effort is not better distributed,
including among businesses.
Which businesses pay their employees the most unemployment
insurance? The labour intensive ones and the small and medium
size businesses. The big ones rarely do. So the businesses
providing the most jobs pay the most. Not just for the plan, but for
the surplus in the fund, which is used only for the deficit.
When the minister decided to reduce the portion of salary from
which unemployment insurance contributions are collected, we in
the opposition tried to point out how unreasonable this was. Instead
of spreading the costs of unemployment insurance to a population
better able to afford it-the higher income earners-the level of
earnings not subject to unemployment insurance premiums was
reduced to $39,000. This is crazy.
The minister says: ``This will continue. There was a $5 billion
surplus in 1996; there will be at least $5 billion more at the end of
1997''. About 1998-he is telling us what a good job he has done to
get re-elected-he is saying nothing. He is saying nothing about
reducing it, so there will be another $5 billion. It is turning into a
tax, and not a hidden one. Much of unemployment insurance
contributions goes to reducing the debt for society as a whole, yet it
is workers who earn up to $39,000 who pay.
Those who can, who pay from their first hour of work, the first
dollar they earn, they are the ones who are paying down the deficit.
Those who earn over $39,000 are not.
(1520)
I also want to discuss child poverty. This issue also makes me
really upset. The Liberal government got elected after stressing
how caring it was, how big a heart it had, and how it was going to
tackle the issue of child poverty. Back in 1993, one of the
initiatives the government promised to take to fight child
poverty-I know because I was the critic on that issue and I
debated it with the Liberal leading lights of the time-was a
national daycare service. Not one penny was ever allocated to that
project. Zero. The minister argued that the provinces would refuse
to go along, which was true in some, but not in all cases. Be that as
it may, not one penny was spent on that initiative. That
commitment was going to cost $720 million.
8399
I was astonished when I saw in the budget, that the minister
was recycling that promise. The finance minister may not like the
comparison, but he is doing with tax benefits what Mr. Duplessis
used to do with his promise to build a bridge. Mr. Duplessis would
run at least two elections on a promise to build a bridge. The
Liberal Party is in the process of running two elections, perhaps
three-we will see after the next election-with the same promise
to tackle the real causes of child poverty.
This time, the instrument being used is not a national daycare
service, but a chid tax benefit. However, what guarantee do we
have that the government will fulfil this promise? This year, it will
invest $50 million.
There are 1.5 million children in Quebec and in Canada who live
in poverty. In its generous spirit, the government says: ``We will
invest $50 million'', which means $33 more per year for each poor
child in Quebec and in Canada. When children live in poverty it is
because their parents live in poverty, because they do not have a
job, because they were cut off employment insurance, because they
have problems getting welfare, because they are not in good health.
As you know, the causes of poverty are cumulative: one cause
triggers another, and so on. Can the government seriously claim to
be doing something about child poverty by giving $33 more per
year per child? This is the firm part of its commitment.
The other is a promise, said to be carved in stone, a commitment.
If this were my first election, I would say: ``Let us give credit to the
government. After all, there have been some Liberal traditions in
the past''. But now I do not give credit to the government this time.
I have no confidence left in the government and, worse, I am
outraged. And I am going to tell you why.
In his budget, the finance minister says that he is proud because,
since the government is in office, in terms of deficit reduction,
Canada has gone from being the worst country in the G7 to being
the best, which means that Canada is the leader in deficit reduction.
Members are aware that international figures always take some
time to adjust, but the latest OECD data-what better source can
you ask for-show that Canada is the worst not only among the G7
nations, but also among the OECD countries in terms of assistance
to poor children.
(1525)
In what some say is the best country in the world, how can we
accept to be the best in deficit reduction, at the expense of the
future and the health of our children, given the social impact this
will have, because we tried to go about it faster than other countries
who were already doing much better that Canada was, at a time
when Canada's programs were also doing much better?
I could quote it at length, but I will just point out that, in Europe,
when they calculate poverty before transfers and taxes, in France,
for instance, in 1984, it was 24.7 per cent before and 5.7 per cent
after. In Canada, in 1987, the poverty rate was 18.4 and 12.6 per
cent after taxes.
Since then, social programs in Canada have deteriorated. To my
knowledge at least, a global evaluation has not been made but it
must be made, since future generations are the ones that will pay.
We talk a lot about the budget deficit; when will we talk about the
health deficit, the intellectual development deficit, the social
development deficit that will result from these often drastic cuts?
These will be the social costs of the decisions this government is so
proud of.
I would have liked the Bloc Quebecois not to be the only party in
this House to speak up on this. My colleagues may make as much
noise as they want, I know what I am talking about and they know
it. They should be happy to have us here, since we are now the only
ones to speak for the future of young people in Quebec and Canada
in our role as the official opposition.
This is not a good budget for ordinary Canadians. This is a sad
budget. All those who have already put enough money aside will
benefit from the economic indicators, but everybody else will be
hard-pressed to find hope where there is not much hope.
_____________________________________________
8399
ROUTINE PROCEEDINGS
[
English]
Mr. Paul Zed (Parliamentary Secretary to Leader of the
Government in the House of Commons, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, I
believe there would be unanimous consent for the following
motion. I move:
That the Standing Committee on Agriculture and Agri-Food be authorized to
travel to Winnipeg, Regina, Saskatoon, Calgary and Grand Prairie from March 17 to
March 21, 1997 in relation to its examination of Bill C-72, an act to amend the
Canadian Wheat Board Act, and that the necessary staff accompany the committee.
(Motion agreed to.)
* * *
The House resumed consideration of the motion that this House
approves in general the budgetary policy of the government.
(1530)
Mr. Barry Campbell (Parliamentary Secretary to Minister of
Finance, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, I listened with interest to the hon.
8400
member opposite. Yes, we have talked a great deal about the G-7 in
comparisons with Canada but not just on deficit reduction.
She conveniently left out these comparisons. According to the
OECD, according to the IMF, Canada in the year that is beginning
April 1 will lead the G-7 in growth. Canada will lead the G-7 in job
creation. According to an IMF report reported widely in the press
yesterday, Canada is well ahead of other nations in the G-7, indeed
throughout the OECD, in dealing with the problems of an aging
population. Does she want to comment on that?
Second, in her focus on merely $50 million for children, she is
leaving out for some reason the budget announcement of over $600
million in new money available for children, une prestation fiscale
pour enfants bonifier.
It is going to raise the amount of support that the federal
government provides to children under the child tax system as it
currently is moving to a new system from $5.1 billion to $6 billion.
She leaves that out for some reason and talks only about $50
million. It will be $850 million added to the existing program, $600
million of which is new money.
For some reason she leaves out entirely le Programme visant à
améliorer la santé de nos enfants, an extra $100 million for prenatal
nutrition and for the vital CAPC program. Is she aware of that or
has she just forgotten?
[Translation]
Mrs. Lalonde: Mr. Speaker, the parliamentary secretary
certainly knows that I am usually very well informed and that I
have not forgotten that. I would like to remind him that the OECD
statistics to which I was referring have to do with social policies.
It is predicted that Canada will be the leader in growth, in jobs,
just as you said, and in dealing with the problems of an aging
population.
In the area of jobs, changes that are occurring on the labour
market have to be taken into account. Some people are saying that
not much is being done. Last year, 125,000 of the 170,000 net jobs
that were created were independent jobs. The only longitudinal
studies available on this subject show that independent jobs, a
number of which were probably created by public service
employees who have received their separation incentive and have
decided to start a small business of some sort-
Mr. Campbell: Is it not a good thing?
Mrs. Lalonde: I am not saying that it is not a good thing. Mr.
Speaker, you should tell him to address the Chair and to stop
provoking me.
Independent jobs are interesting for those who hold them.
However, when almost all net jobs created in a country are
independent jobs, it is a sign that a revolution is taking place on the
labour market. All our social programs, all our systems are not
designed to meet that need. Definitely not. For example, the
unemployment insurance program is not designed for those people.
These jobs are far from being permanent, and they often generate
less revenue. This issue needs to be given serious consideration.
As for growth, you are well aware that growth may not mean
much sharing. Growth and improving the lot of the average citizen
are two separate things. What I was talking about was improving
the lot of the average citizen.
I would like the secretary of state to listen to me when he
suggests that I omitted, for a reason he no doubt finds suspect, the
$600 million the government has promised for the child tax benefit.
I did not omit this amount. I said that the government had set aside
only $50 million this year. I am not entitled to table a book. There
will be $470 million after the election and the figure will not reach
$600 million until 1999-2000.
I would ask the hon. secretary of state to consult his own papers,
or I will provide him with copies.
(1535)
So, what people will have before them during the election will be
$50 million. The rest will come after the election. Last time, during
the election, $720 million was promised for a national child care
system. We never saw a cent. So, before I believe there will be
$470 million for the child tax benefit the following year and $600
million the year after that, I will have to wait for the bill. Before
then, there will be an election and another opportunity for the
government to do what it wants.
Finally, there is health. As far as health is concerned, in Quebec
anyway, the federal government has outdone itself: It has cut social
transfers, it has cut assistance for health and, here, the government,
using part of this money, instead of giving it to the province that
has come up with a drug insurance plan, will provide $150 million
in assistance to provinces for drug insurance plans. Maybe Quebec
has a good idea. Let us help the others. Quebec did not ask for
subsidies to implement its plan. It did it despite the cuts, without
seeking any assistance. In its generosity, the federal government is
going to look after research projects to be developed in other
provinces.
The federal government will develop a health information
system. The provinces are unable to exchange such information.
And this brings me to the third point, the best of all. This too goes
back to 1993. In Quebec we have a special program. This program
was developed by a community group which found that
underweight and disadvantaged women gave birth to small babies
with all sorts of health problems. Gradually, those groups
convinced CLSCs and others to give those women who claimed
unemployment insurance benefits one egg, milk and an orange
every day. The program yielded tremendous results.
8401
I can still remember an major television program in which the
Liberals promised to take care of small babies. This was in 1993.
Now I know how the last $100 million will be used: a Canadian
prenatal nutrition program will be established. Just imagine. The
government will send civil servants all across Canada to help
community groups to distribute one egg, milk and oranges to
babies who are still in their mother's womb and who will not have
much hope in life.
I hope the parliamentary secretary realizes there are major flaws
in his minister's budget.
Mr. Campbell: Mr. Speaker, this temporary change will add
$195 million in July 1997 to the budget for the working income
supplement, which means $70 million more than the increase
proposed on the same date in the 1996 budget.
[English]
And the other $600 million will come in by July 1998. So that is
real, new money.
[Translation]
Mrs. Lalonde: Mr. Speaker, in the budget it was $250 million,
announced last year. So honestly-
[English]
Mr. Barry Campbell (Parliamentary Secretary to Minister of
Finance, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, I want to take this opportunity before
speaking to the budget to respond to some of the things that have
been said by some members opposite.
(1540 )
The Reform Party has been critical of a number of things. First is
the child tax benefit which will raise federal spending for children
once fully implemented to $6 billion a year. Incredibly, the leader
of the Reform Party or, as someone referred to him yesterday, the
leader who aspires to be the leader of the fifth party in this House,
said yesterday that commitment is totally negated by the cuts in
transfers since 1993. That is an incredible statement from the
Reform Party, the party that wants to cut faster, including transfers,
so that it can give a tax break to its friends. It is really astounding.
Its budget plan would decimate education and health.
Reformers cannot have it both ways. They cannot criticize us for
not doing enough out of one side of their mouth and out of the other
side of their mouth say ``but if it were our way, we would cut
faster''. When it comes to protecting medicare, education and
children, Canadians do not look to the members opposite but to this
side of the House.
Then incredibly Reformers in their debate over the last days
have been critical of deficit reduction, arguing that some of the
relief comes from growth in the economy. I will just stop there.
What are they saying? Are they against growth in the economy?
They are right, the economy is growing because of the steps we
have taken in our three prior budgets. Corporate profits are up, tax
revenues are up as a result of that and somehow that is a bad thing.
It is really quite something to behold and extremely difficult to
understand.
Then there is the Bloc, members of the official opposition.
[Translation]
Last night, I read the speech made yesterday by the hon. member
for St. Hyacinthe-Bagot regarding the budget. Unfortunately, it
was pretty confused and his logic was way off.
[English]
On taxes they attack us on a lack of action. They allege we are
lazy. I would say that if anyone is lazy in this debate it is the
members of the official opposition because they did not read the
document entitled ``L'équité fiscale'', one of the budget
documents.
[Translation]
If they had read it, they would have found examples of measures
adopted since 1993 to enhance tax fairness.
[English]
I could cite from that just three examples of steps we have taken
to address the very concern they raise.
[Translation]
For example: eliminating the $100,000 lifetime capital gains
exemption, extending the base for the alternative minimum tax,
eliminating tax advantages available through trusts, restricting the
use of tax shelters.
The opposition is opposed to all those measures. They voted
against our budget.
[English]
They were opposed to these measures and yet they stand here
and say that we have not done anything in the tax fairness area. We
have done it but we have done it without their help.
Again on the point of a total lack of logic in the speeches by the
members from the official opposition, incredibly they allege that
the deficit has come down because tax revenues have gone up.
Then a page later, in the speech I read last night, the member for
Saint-Hyacinthe-Bagot said that it was because of cuts. Which is
it?
[Translation]
One cannot talk from both sides of one's mouth at the same time.
[English]
Let me turn to the budget itself. When we came to office in the
fall of 1993 our country faced a number of daunting political policy
challenges about the economic and fiscal fronts. We were not
8402
alone. Indeed our problems were shared by most industrialized
countries.
Where Canada is unique perhaps is in the straight ahead
approach we have taken to implement lasting structural reforms.
We went beyond hopeful talk to hard action and tough choices and
that is delivering accelerating results and growing benefits to
Canadians. The evidence is clear and concrete. The opposition
merely has to put aside their partisan glasses and read this year's
budget with open eyes. That is what financial markets have done;
that is what Canadians have done.
(1545)
[Translation]
I need not remind this House why we took these vigourous and
disciplined measures to put our financial house in order. Large
deficits and a huge public sector debt made interest rates soar,
undermined confidence, drained domestic savings and caused a
considerable increase in the country's foreign debt.
That illustrates our philosophy in financial matters. Dealing with
the problem of public finances is not go a goal in itself-we see the
reform of public finances as a prerequisite for national growth, job
creation, security and economic and social independence. We are
starting to see the results.
[English]
In the economic arena, forecasters concur. As I said earlier,
Canada will be a growth and job creation leader in the G-7 this
year. One of the key engines for this growth is interest rates.
Currently short term rates are near a 35-year low. In fact, they are
lower than comparable U.S. rates for maturities of up to 10 years.
That is no accident. Our fiscal plan combined with our
commitment to low inflation has created the conditions and the
credibility needed to bring down interest rates.
In today's debate I want to continue to focus on our fiscal record.
That is not to ignore important investments that the budget
announced in job creation and in vital social action for low income
children, for health care, for the disabled and to assist charities.
This is in the historic tradition of nation building and support for
those in need that has been the heart blood of our party and
distinguishes us from others in this House.
These investments would not have been possible without
jeopardizing jobs and growth, without our sustained progress in
deficit reduction. It is jobs and economic growth that are
themselves key components in helping eliminate poverty and
hardship.
The budget announced this week shows that our consistent
cohesive fiscal plan is working. It confirms that our federal deficit
this year will be no higher than $19 billion. I want to highlight
some points about that.
First, that result is over $5 billion below the target we set out.
This is the third year in a row that we have bettered our targets.
Second, when we took office the deficit that year, 1993-94, was
$42 billion or 5.9 per cent of GDP. This year as I said the deficit
will be under $20 billion, closer to $19 billion or lower, or less than
3 per cent of GDP. We have cut the deficit in half in three years.
Third, our 1996-97 results will also be more than $9.5 billion
below our deficit a year ago. That is the largest year over year
decline ever in the history of this country.
Fourth, how we are achieving this dramatic progress is just as
important as the results themselves. The vast bulk of our fiscal
action has been on the expenditure side, cutting spending rather
than raising taxes. In fact this is also our third budget in a row with
no increase in personal income tax rates.
There are a number of factors contributing to the success of
Canada's deficit diet.
[Translation]
First, our budget planning was based on cautious economic
assumptions. These included the assumption that the interest rates
would be higher than what all of the forecasters in the private
sector had predicted. However, interest rates were lower than
forecast, because of the credibility we re-established on the
financial level. Lower rates meant lower costs of servicing a much
smaller public debt.
Then there was the contingency fund, included in our plan in
order to prevent our finances from going off course, in the event we
ended up with a crisis like that of the Mexican peso and the
volatility it caused in the international markets and in interest rates.
(1550)
However, we also made it very clear, from the outset, that, if this
reserve were not needed it would not be spent, it would go directly
to reducing the deficit. And this is what happened again this year.
[English]
But budgets are about tomorrow, not just today. Here again our
fiscal story is a good one and I am afraid it drives the members
opposite nuts.
The 1997 budget reaffirms that we are clearly on track to meet
our deficit targets of 2 per cent of GDP in 1997-98 and 1 per cent in
1998-99. That 1 per cent mark will represent a historic turning
point for our country. It is a point where our financial requirements,
that is, the need to borrow net new money on financial markets to
pay for our programs and debt charges, will be eliminated.
While there will still be a deficit, it will be managed through the
federal government's own internal resources. That means that 1998
will mark the first time in 28 years we will not have to go to the
8403
markets for new money. It will put the Canadian federal
government in an enviable position internationally.
Financial requirements of course is the way most other major
countries measure their deficits. By eliminating them in 1998,
Canada will have the best financial record of any G-7 country
based on current national budget plans.
[Translation]
It must be clear that the turnaround of Canada's public finances
is not the work of the federal government alone-it is a national
accomplishment. The provinces and territories significantly
improved their financial situation too and continue to do so. This is
why the total deficit in the government sector should improve
considerably in Canada, compared to the other countries in the G7.
[English]
I want to return to a key point. Our federal deficit improvement
has been overwhelmingly achieved through cuts in program
spending instead of boosting the tax burden.
An hon. member: Higher taxes.
Mr. Campbell: The member opposite talks about higher
revenues. He is against a growing economy.
In 1998-99, federal program spending will have fallen for six
consecutive years in absolute terms. Look at the figures. As a
percentage of GDP, government revenues have been outstripped by
cuts in spending by government. In fact in 1998-99, federal
program spending will have fallen for six consecutive years in
absolute terms and it will be almost 14 per cent below its level in
1993-94.
This progress on the deficit front has a vital carryover to our
federal debt. It will translate into the first significant decline in the
federal debt to GDP ratio since the mid-1970s by over three full
percentage points over the next two years.
This is being achieved by cuts that are reasonable, that the
Canadian people are able to absorb and that they are supportive of.
They are cuts that are not gutting the vital social programs of this
country and they are not gutting this country in the process. Our
approach has emphasized action inside government. There were no
increases in personal income tax rates. In the 1997 budget there are
no tax increases whatsoever.
There is another way to underscore this point. Of the cumulative
fiscal actions we will have taken in the last three years, almost 90
per cent have been expenditure savings.
The bottom line is that we have reformed the entire structure of
program spending. Our approach has been balanced and one that
recognizes two critical interrelated goals. It is not good enough
just to get our fiscal house in order in a way that is sustainable. We
also have to make sure that our approach advances our economic
growth and job creation objectives and strengthens social
well-being.
As the Minister of Finance said in his budget speech: ``The
responsibility of government is to do more than just balance the
books''. That is why, in line with our financial improvement, the
1997 budget announced targeted initiatives to further advance our
economic and social priorities.
[Translation]
In economic terms, we are investing in tourism, small business
and rural development. Each of these sectors offers significant job
creation possibilities.
In a world where economic and technological change moves
exponentially, we must build the foundations of tomorrow's jobs
and competitive advantages. This is why we are also investing in
higher education and innovation-through a foundation with $800
million in funding to support projects in the areas of the science,
engineering, health and the environment.
(1555)
[English]
Further, our government remains committed to the fact that a
strong economy is built on a strong society and a strong society is
one that cares for those in need. Surely this is a fundamental raison
d'être for government itself.
Our deficit reduction plan has not been a smoke screen for
government withdrawing but for continuing to be able to stand
alongside Canadians. We are providing new support to strengthen
the health care system. We are moving with the provinces toward a
more effective national system of assistance to low income
families with children. We want to put an end to the welfare trap
where families can end up worse off by returning to work.
These investments have been carefully designed so that our
fiscal targets are not in any jeopardy. Nearly 80 per cent of these
initiatives take the form of targeted tax relief rather than increased
spending.
Even with our new measures, the level of program spending in
1997-98 and 1998-99 will still be lower than what was projected in
last year's budget. The members opposite must be sitting there
asking: ``How do they do it?'' We do it with reasoned and prudent
action in the interests of Canadians.
I focused most of my remarks on our fiscal success. Let me
repeat that financial turnaround is itself an investment in some-
8404
thing bigger: the economic future of our country and its ability to
provide Canadians with jobs and growth and preserve valuable
social assistance.
Because time is short, I am going to conclude. There has been a
repetitive mantra through my remarks, that results are or will be the
best ever. That only reflects the magnitude of the fiscal and
economic turnaround that hard work by Canadians and tough
choices by government has won us.
It is easy to forget how dismal the prospects were when we came
to office in the fall of 1993 and how concerned all members of the
House were about where we would be three years hence. The
economic challenges were formidable, but our resolve has been
firm, our plan consistent and concrete. As a result our economic
and fiscal fundamentals are strong and are improving. We will not
let that progress falter because it has not been a goal in itself but a
means to ensure that Canadians have a strong and vibrant economy
that provides long term jobs and a society we can be proud of
because it does not deliberately leave anyone behind.
Mr. Philip Mayfield (Cariboo-Chilcotin, Ref.): Mr. Speaker,
I am dismayed to hear the parliamentary secretary speak about a
government budget defended by building strawmen to hack down.
Is that all this budget is about?
He talks about what Reform has done. It is the Liberals who have
hacked billions out of our social programs, out of our health care
system and then before an election gives back a few thousand. That
is the nature of this budget and that is why we are so disappointed.
In terms of health care there is not going to be any improvement
from this budget in the six hospitals in my constituency nor in the
hospitals in the outlying areas. This is a shadow budget.
The parliamentary secretary spoke about the friends of Reform
and that Reformers want to reduce spending for their friends. That
is true. But let me tell the House who our friends are.
Our friends are the ordinary Canadian people who want jobs,
who want medical care when they need it, who want the freedom
and opportunity to earn their living and to enjoy the fruits of their
labour. Our friends are the Canadian people who reject the Liberal
determination that the government can care for them, can take care
of capable people better than those same capable people can take
care of themselves. These are our friends. It is true that we want to
reduce spending on their behalf.
(1600 )
Why does the government continue to promote the philosophical
idea with the budget that Canadians must continually sacrifice and
serve the needs of government when what they need is a
government that will simply and unobtrusively serve the Canadian
people?
Mr. Campbell: Mr. Speaker, talk about rhetoric. It is really
incredible. My copy of the taxpayers' budget in brief is getting sort
of dog eared. It is interesting reading. When I look through it, it is
really incredible.
Reformers suggest they have a better way. Let me explain their
better way. Their better way has been called slash and burn. Their
better way would gut the very programs we are saving and
preserving for Canadians, for instance the CPP, support for seniors,
the employment insurance program. Their broad and dramatic cuts
would have kicked in by now if their budget had governed the
country over the last three years. Instead we have had a reasoned,
prudent and balanced approach and this country has survived
enormous sacrifices.
I would like the member opposite to come to my riding and talk
to people who have shared the pain with other Canadians of the cuts
we have made and tell them that they should be cut deeper and
longer to make the same achievement faster than we are making
prudently in a reasoned and measured way which Canadians
support because it supports their values.
Mr. John Williams (St. Albert, Ref.): Mr. Speaker, I enjoy
debating the budget with my colleagues from the other side. There
seems to be a great deal of misconception by them about what they
are actually saying and about what Canadians actually want to hear.
The member talked about how we would gut programs. But look
at the estimates that were tabled this morning. This very morning
we learned that the Liberal plan for the Canada health and social
transfer to the provinces involves a decline from $14.9 billion to
$12.5 billion, a reduction of $2.4 billion. That is about 18 per cent
that they will gut out of health care. They will throw a few peanuts
back and think they are doing everybody a service.
We listened to the parliamentary secretary tell us about his
deficit targets: 2 per cent this year, 1 per cent next year, zero per
cent the following year. When I take a look at ``Getting
Government Right: A Progress Report'', page four, table one, they
are talking about a balanced budget next year. Mr. Speaker, I know
you are rather sensitive about these comparisons but there is a clear
contradiction between what the parliamentary secretary is saying
and what their publication from this morning is saying.
I can hear it now. At election time they are going to say:
``Hallelujah brother, we've got a balanced budget coming down the
pipe. Vote for us''. The smoke and mirrors and the spin doctors are
at it already.
Let us find out how they are gutting business. Their figures from
the estimates tabled this morning show a surplus of $6 billion in the
employment insurance fund last year. The projected surplus next
year is $5.6 billion.
The infrastructure program, which was going to create all those
jobs, jobs, jobs was a $6 billion municipal infrastructure program
8405
that put new canopies on town halls and built boccie courts and so
on. They have quietly sucked out of business-that great sucking
noise of jobs disappearing down the drain-$5 billion next year
and $6 billion last year. That is gutting business.
I have a final point on the hypocrisy of this government. I
remember December 11, 1995 when the Prime Minister stood up in
the House and said that we are going to pass a motion in this House
that says that ``we recognize that Quebec's distinct society includes
its French-speaking majority, unique culture and civil law
traditions, and we undertake to be guided by this reality. We
encourage all components of the legislative branches to take note
and be guided in their conduct accordingly''.
(1605 )
My question for the parliamentary secretary is this. Can he tell
us how the motion passed by an order of the House is reflected in
the budget and in the estimates tabled this morning?
Mr. Campbell: Mr. Speaker, let me take the last part first
because it is easy. The hon. member opposite asks about the
motion. This budget is in the interest of all Canadians.
Let me come to the substance of what he was saying. I have
many numbers in front of me from their budget which, not
surprisingly, do not add up.
I guess I cannot comment on who is here and who is not, but I
wish the member could hear this. On March 1, 1995, the member
who just spoke but who is not here to listen supported a
subamendment to the budget that asked that the budget be defeated
because it failed to eliminate the deficit quickly and decisively
enough.
Mr. Williams: Mr. Speaker, I rise on a point of order. We have a
rule in this House that says that members cannot note the absence
or presence of others. The parliamentary secretary made reference
to my not being here. I am here.
Some hon. members: You weren't here.
The Deputy Speaker: The member will know that the Speaker
and I were discussing something very important no doubt. I did not
realize that the member was not here. I would ask members not to
refer to the absence of any other of their colleagues.
Mr. Campbell: Mr. Speaker, where I come from we have a
courtesy that we do not turn our backs on each other when we have
asked somebody a question. On March 1, 1995, the member
opposite voted in support of a subamendment on the budget saying
that it should be defeated for its failure to eliminate the deficit
quickly and decisively. In other words, more cuts, deeper cuts than
the ones he is criticizing right now.
Mr. Jim Silye (Calgary Centre, Ref.): Mr. Speaker, I rise today
to speak on Tuesday's budget. I rate the finance minister's
performance an F.
Some hon. members: Oh, oh.
Mr. Silye: Yes, an F, not for everything that is in the budget but
more for what is not in the budget. Some of the members opposite
will chuckle and laugh at this but yes, he rates an F. I know he
thinks the whole world is in love with him and he can walk on
water but he only deserves an F.
He gets an F for failing to recognize the real problem: the debt
and the interest costs to service that debt. We are headed in the right
direction by reducing the deficit but the finance minister gets an F
for the inconsistent application of fundamentals, for not acting
quicker on spending cuts like doing them in his first year, and for
not making spending cuts in other areas, not just in the Canada
health and social transfer and defence.
He took $7.5 billion out of direct aid to health, education and
welfare. Yet he brags about the Liberals' philosophy of caring and
sharing with Canadian society is the be all and the end all to the
Canadian public. Only Liberals know how to serve the Canadian
public. None of the opposition parties know. The Liberals have
knifed, slashed, scorched, burned $7.5 billion out of health,
education and welfare. That is too much.
We say in our fresh start program that we need to reinfuse,
reinject $4 billion into health and education. Where do we get this
money? We get it from reallocation of the existing budget and by
reducing spending in the area of direct grants and subsidies to
business by $2 billion. The elimination of regional development
grants are close to a billion dollars. Also, savings through
priorization could generate another billion dollars.
Do we really need another infrastructure program? All
provinces, including our so-called ideological cousins of Alberta
and Ontario, the Conservatives, have been duped. I say to Mr. Klein
and to Mr. Harris: ``Wake up''. What the infrastructure
development is all about is fighting over budgets: one-third,
one-third, one-third. The federal government has convinced the
provinces that they are paying for one-third and that the other
levels of government get two-thirds leverage. Whichever they are,
the other two levels pay the two-thirds.
(1610)
The premiers should wake up. They are forgetting there is only
one taxpayer, whose high level of taxation will remain high if
politicians keep spending on untimely and unnecessary projects.
I am not against infrastructure. It is important. That is why taxes
are paid. Alberta has a surplus. It should apply the surplus to the
infrastructure and the social services that are needed without
adding to the debt, without borrowing from the federal
government, which in turn borrows from taxpayers, which keeps
our taxes too high.
8406
The federal government is simply buying votes and the premiers
and mayors of the country who participate are willing
accomplices.
This good but not great finance minister has raised tax revenues
by $24 billion. He has not done that by raising the personal tax rate
but by broadening the personal and corporate tax base and not
lowering the rate. Yes, he gets an F for not coming clean with the
Canadian public. He has raised tax revenues. He gets an F for
saying he has not raised taxes.
He has reduced overall spending by $14.2 billion. By next year it
will be $16.5 billion. However, he has increased spending by
adding $100 billion to the debt, thereby adding an extra $8 billion
per year to the annual interest cost to service the debt which will
now stand at $46 billion. The government came in four years ago at
$38 billion. The finance minister gets an F for not telling
Canadians that this interest cost could jeopardize their future
needs.
The interest cost is the cancer that is killing and shrinking the
money which is available for our social safety net. The finance
minister gets an F in finance for misdirecting, for three years, the
public's attention solely to the deficit and creating the very false
illusion or impression that once the deficit is under control we will
have greater flexibility and prosperity will be around the corner.
For heaven's sake, the finance minister has concentrated on the
deficit for too long and used strong rhetoric for so long that the
editorial board of the Toronto Star, that wonderful paper, asked:
``What is the finance minister going to do with this windfall of $7
billion that he is ahead on his deficit target?'' They want him to
spend that $7 billion.
This government came in with a $38 billion deficit, inflated it to
$42 billion, blamed the Conservatives, and has now reduced it to
$19 billion. A $42 billion deficit is awful. It is bad. But a $19
billion deficit is awful. It is just as bad. The whole point of the
matter is that we have to start to create a surplus.
If we do not reduce the debt, what will happen? What if the
interest rate was 9 per cent today instead of the 4.5 to 5 per cent we
are paying? What would our interest payment be? I shudder to
think of it. That interest payment would be much higher than $46
billion. It would force Canadians to sacrifice much more than they
are now. The finance minister gets an F for not sharing these
possibilities with Canadians.
The debt to GDP ratio is important. It is more important than the
deficit, yet we have spent four years arguing about the size of the
deficit. What a shame.
If the debt is not reduced, interest costs could skyrocket and
really blow a hole in our economy. So we continue to live in fear
and uncertainty, which is why our economy stumbles along at a 1.5
per cent to 2.5 per cent growth rate per year. Now the Liberals are
trying to tell Canadians that is a great growth rate, it is fantastic.
If we created surpluses in the budget we could service some of
the debt, the economy could grow at 4 per cent or 5 per cent. That is
growth. That is when opportunities would create jobs.
He gets an F because he has not created or developed a business
plan like the province of Alberta. That business plan should be
published with the budget estimates, which would justify each and
every program expenditure. It would not just say, ``here is what we
spent''. It would be a business plan which justifies why the
government is spending on infrastructure, why it is spending so
much on health, why it is spending so much on agriculture, and for
what purpose, and why it is supporting the wheat board and what
the wheat board is doing. It would be a business plan.
(1615 )
Then we will find out that maybe we should not be involved in
these areas and leave it to the provinces. Then the provinces can do
the same thing. Maybe they should not be involved. They can leave
it to municipalities and stay out of those jurisdictions. That is
another big, huge saving.
He gets an F for not apply this financial acumen to his budget.
He gets a huge F for his failure to recognize that if on the one hand
we cannot lower personal tax rates during a deficit period, even
though he claims to have broken the back of the deficit, how is it
that we can increase spending, as he just did in Tuesday's budget by
a couple of billion dollars? How is that? Are they not one and the
same? One is when we spend there is a possibility of a return that
would flow through the economy, but so does a tax break.
Finally, he gets an F for the contradictions and inconsistencies in
applying his financial values. CPP has problems. CPP has to be
corrected. There is no question. But he has changed it, he has
panicked, he has over reacted. A 70 per cent increase is too much.
There is a $39 billion surplus in that fund and yes, we take out more
than we bring in on a pay as you go basis, but there are some other
solutions.
He has an EI surplus of $5 billion, soon to be $9 billion, which
belongs to the provinces, but the government only pays the
provinces once a year. On the backs of the unemployed he is
lowering that deficit and that is not right. He gets an F.
There is another F for going against generally accepted
accounting principles. He did it last year with that billion dollar
bribe-I am sorry, Mr. Speaker, with that billion dollar payment to
the provinces on a plan for the harmonization which comes into
effect April 1 of this year. There was only a letter of intent signed
prior to March 31 of this past year. According to the auditor general
that
8407
was borderline. This year he is doing it again on investing in the
Canada Foundation for Innovation.
He is charging off $800 million to year ending 1997. Is their a
contract? Did the provinces sign? Do they know how to spend the
money? Who gets the money? How can he do that? Against
generally accepted accounting principles he is setting a bad
precedent. He is playing ``Monopoly'' with the accounts of this
nation and it is not right. He gets an F for going against generally
accepted accounting principles.
He says he did a great job of cutting. Of the $14 billion to date he
gets an F because over half of it has just been downloading on the
provinces and he has not looked at his own programs.
The department of defence has been the best run department. It
has done the best job of analysing, doing a business plan, making
the cuts, privatizing and then what is left is to serve the Canadian
public. Why can we not do that in Revenue Canada, that over
bloated, over intrusive department of $2.2 billion in costs and
40,000 plus civil servants? It is away too big. Why can we not cut
that down? But no. The finance minister gets an F on this budget.
Mr. Andrew Telegdi (Waterloo, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, I welcome
this opportunity to make comments on my friend's comments. I
remember one of the first times I stood in this House I was sitting
in the rump. I said to the hon. member that it seems like some of the
most reasonable people come from Calgary. Of course, I excluded
from those comments the leader of the third party. It seems to me
when we get to the next election-
The Deputy Speaker: On a point of order, the member for St.
Albert.
Mr. Williams: Mr. Speaker, I think the hon. member is making
disparaging remarks against the leader of the Reform Party and I
would ask him to withdraw.
The Deputy Speaker: The language used was not
unparliamentary. Unfortunately a great deal of what is said in this
House is criticizing other members and unfortunately that is still
allowed. The hon. member for Waterloo has the floor.
Mr. Telegdi: Mr. Speaker, I am amazed that the member
opposite cannot even accept a compliment given to a previous
speaker and would stand up and complain. I am quite surprised.
Be that as it may, I did make a comment that there were those
three reasonable members and unfortunately none of them will be
running in the next election.
(1620)
Let me raise some points with regard to the speech. The member
mentioned, for instance, that somehow Ralph Klein and Mike
Harris were being conned into the infrastructure program and it
was a waste of money. The member knows I come from the federal
riding of Waterloo and I have two excellent universities in my
riding.
I would like to tell the member that when we invested in
infrastructure, and part of the investment in infrastructure went to
the universities, we invested in the future of our young, in our
future work force, so we can compete worldwide and win. Instead
of saying that the Minister of Finance gets an F on that, the
Minister of Finance gets an A.
Let me further tell the hon. member that at the present time in
Waterloo, the University of Waterloo supplies the greatest number
of workers for Microsoft in the United States. Surely the member
would understand that having Canadian graduates go through
taxpayer funded universities in Canada and ending up working in a
high tech job in the United States-
The Deputy Speaker: The hon. member's time has expired.
Mr. Silye: Mr. Speaker, I am not sure if I heard a question in
there but I think I have a general idea of where the member was
going.
I do believe infrastructure is very important. I did not say it is not
important. It is one of the first areas we should spend the Canadian
tax dollars we collect but it is when you spend it and how you spend
it. It is an admission of failure by the three levels of government
when all of a sudden because the federal government announces a
plan they say that they have bridges to fix and roads to pave. For
example, the mayor of Ottawa wants as much as she can get out of
this infrastructure to build a hotel here. That is not what
infrastructure money is for. It is more in the private sector.
The same for Calgary when they spent $9 million on the
Saddledome. That was not what the infrastructure should have been
for. That should have been done by private sector. What happened
to the private sector? What happened to the risk reward
relationship? As politicians if we get embedded with the private
sector there is going to become a conflict of interest. They are not
going to be able to say no. Which companies do you help? Then the
marketplace is distorted.
The $800 million plan for the Canada foundation of the Network
of Centres of Excellence is a good way to spend that expenditure
money. It will be spread out over time, it will not all be in the 1997
budget but yet it is included in here. That is why I say it is against
generally accepted accounting principles. Unless there are signed
agreements with everybody on the $800 million, and I hope there is
and I am sure the auditor general will let us know whether there is
or not. Fudging deficit numbers just for the sake of the deficit is
creating an illusion that we have money to spend. We do not. A
deficit is a minus, albeit a $19 billion minus is a lot less than a $42
billion minus and it is a big improvement.
8408
I compliment the government for reducing the deficit but I
criticize the government and give it an F for not doing it sooner
and faster when it knows the real problem is the debt. The finance
minister gets an F because his rhetoric does not match the reality.
The reality is that he took $7.5 billion from the poor for education
and hospitals.
Look at what Ontario finance minister Ernie Eaves said. He said
``they took away $2 billion and now they are going to give us back
$200 million''. He is mistaken if he thinks that $200 million that
this government is giving back, both for infrastructure and on the
social services, is coming soon and without strings attached,
without rules as to how he has to spend that money. This fight is not
over. He said he wants to help the disabled, the students and he lays
out a big program but it is spread out over three years. Two-thirds
of the money if not more is after the next election.
(1625 )
The biggest scam of all and the one I am going to predict right
now is the one which will happen in the next federal election to be
called for June. After the election has been called for June and after
we hit the year ending March 1997 we will have a projected $19
billion deficit. It is not a $19 billion deficit. He knows it is not a
$19 billion deficit. He could have said that as of today it is only $17
billion but he is not going to. He is actually going to announce a
$16 billion deficit. He can now do a tax relief and he can promise
this and that.
This finance minister gets an F for not matching the rhetoric
with the reality.
Mr. John Williams (St. Albert, Ref.): Mr. Speaker, I am
pleased to rise to present my views on the budget that was
presented by the Minister of Finance the other day.
Perhaps I will widen the debate to include some remarks about
the Canada pension plan. I know the Minister of Finance will say
that is not in the budget figures, therefore it really does not matter.
We all know that last week he announced an increase of 70 per cent
on CPP premiums. That is going to take $10 billion a year out of
business.
I remember in the last election how the Liberals ran around
trying to drum up votes by saying ``we will create jobs, jobs, jobs
through a $6 billion infrastructure program''. Well, good-bye
infrastructure, good-bye a $6 billion incentive for business because
now they are going to suck $10 billion out of the business world.
That is why I think we should be using Ross Perot's words, the
great sucking sound of jobs disappearing, not down to Mexico as in
the case of Mr. Perot, but sucking out of our economy because the
Minister of Finance is sucking this money out of the pockets of
business.
Let us take a look at the seniors benefit. Let us take a look at
what Minister of Finance is actually talking about for seniors. Not
only is he going to kill these jobs with the 70 per cent increase in
premiums, but, as I said earlier today, the old age security is going
to be gone. It is going to be killed, finished and gone forever.
Guaranteed income supplements that many people have relied
upon in this country will be gone. In the year 2001 they will be
finished and gone forever.
Seniors have been given a $3,500 tax free allowance on top of
the basic exemption. That is gone courtesy of this finance minister;
gone, killed, finished forever.
Seniors have been entitled to the first $1,000 of pension income
tax free. Let me tell this House that tax free exemption is going to
be gone, absolutely finished courtesy of the Minister of Finance.
He has the gall to stand up in this House to say he is going to
replace it with a seniors benefit that is going to make everybody
happy. Let me tell this House about the seniors benefit that he
thinks is going to make everybody happy.
If a person has any income besides the seniors benefit, and let us
talk about a senior who only has the seniors benefit and Canada
pension, nothing else in the world, the Minister of Finance is going
to take back half of the Canada pension plan.
It has to be a national disgrace that he can stand here and say this
is good for seniors when he is going to take back half the Canada
pension plan and all they have is a seniors benefit and Canada
pension plan.
Then he has the gall to stand up and say Canada pension plan
premiums are an investment, when no one will even be able to
collect the Canada pension plan when they retire. That is the way
this government is trying to balance the budget. It is through
deception and through misleading senior citizens into thinking
everything is going to be okay, but it is not.
Universality that was brought in by the finance minister's father
is going to be destroyed by finance minister junior. That is the way
it is. There is no universality any more. It is gone courtesy of this
Minister of Finance. That is the legacy that he is giving to
Canadians.
(1630 )
I look at the flowery words in the budget speech and I refer to the
bottom of page 17 where it states: ``Reforms to both the Canada
pension plan and the seniors benefit fully protect all current
seniors''. If we read it fast it sounds pretty good but I draw
attention to the word current, all current seniors. There is no word
about seniors to be, no word about the working people who have to
pay more to collect less. With a little sleight of hand a little word is
slipped in. It is grammatically correct but when we look at the real
meaning behind it we will find that seniors, the people who will
retire in the future will get a lot less after having paid a lot more.
8409
I talked also about the employment insurance and the scandal
that is being perpetrated on the business world of this country.
This morning the estimates were tabled. In part III under Human
Resources Development Canada at the bottom of page 52 I see
for 1996-97 a $6 billion surplus and the projected surplus for next
year is $5.656 billion.
That is a travesty because the employment insurance fund is
supposed to be self-sustaining to help people who lose their jobs
when the business cycle is down. It is not an extra tax trough for the
Minister of Finance. The minister said: ``I am not raising taxes''.
Of course he is. He should not under any circumstances whatsoever
maintain the EI premium where it is because of the huge surplus he
is squeezing out of business.
The minister came out with a little sum for the young people, the
university graduates saying: ``I am going to spend a couple of
hundred million dollars to try and get you a job''. At the same time
he is taking $6 billion out of the business world so that they cannot
get a job. Note the numbers.
I look at pages 10 and 11 of the budget and how the numbers are
glossed over. On page 11, payroll taxes, the minister said: ``When
we came to office, we acted immediately to stop EI premium rates
from rising''. Well maybe he did, but he certainly did not bring
them down as he should have. While he says he is going to bring
them down, it will not be for another year so that he can squeeze
this money out of business and stand in the House again to say:
``Boy, I am doing a great job''. Business bankruptcies are at a
record high; personal bankruptcies are at a record high; 1.5 million
people are out of a job; and one in four working Canadians fear for
their jobs because he is sucking $6 billion a year out of the business
economy.
What about the health and social transfer? Government members
stand in the House and say: ``We will protect medicare''. Protect
medicare, my foot. Compare the figures for this year to those for
last year and again the figures are taken right out of the estimates.
The transfer for 1996-97 is $14.9 billion. That is a lot of money.
Not as much as the government used to give, but it is still a lot of
money. However, next year it will be $12.5 billion, a drop of $2.4
billion.
That affects a lot of hospitals. That is a lot for medicare. That is a
lot of nurses and doctors who could be looking after the people in
this country who need help. For the elective surgery that does not
get done, $2.4 billion buys a lot. It is not being bought and it is not
being provided. People are doing without because the government
is keeping back $2.4 billion so the Minister of Finance can say:
``Boy, am I doing a great job''.
Perhaps the deficit is coming down, but he could bring it down
even more. However the Liberal tendency is to spend every nickel
they can find. The minister cannot keep his fingers off any money
that might be available. I look at page 16 of his budget speech
where he said that he intends to spend 25 per cent of any excess
over projections so that he can blow it away on little Liberal
programs that are going to buy votes in the next election.
(1635 )
Let us remember that the excess over the budget predictions, the
deficit having come down faster than he predicted, was
accomplished strictly on the backs of businesses and taxpayers.
Now that he has squeezed more money out of them than he had
originally anticipated, he is going to take 25 per cent of it to buy
votes at the next election. It is despicable.
My friend for Calgary Centre gave the finance minister an F for
failing to deliver a budget with integrity; for failing to deliver the
kind of budget which Canadians deserve; for failing to deliver jobs;
for failing to deliver health care; for failing to deliver education;
and for failing to look after our seniors.
That is how I feel about this budget.
Mr. John Harvard (Parliamentary Secretary to Minister of
Public Works and Government Services, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, I
have been listening intently to the member for St. Albert. He made
some rather negative comments about the Canada pension plan. I
would invite the member to come to one of the several senior
citizens homes in my riding and say the denigrating things that he
has said about the Canada pension plan. I am wondering how long
he would last in a senior citizens home.
Elderly men and women worked hard to build this country. They
worked hard to support the Canada pension plan. They contributed
a considerable amount of their own wealth to the Canada pension
plan. The very last thing they want is for some government to
abandon their hopes and the Canada pension plan.
The word from the senior citizens of this country to the
government has been very clear: ``We want you to secure the
Canada pension plan. We want you to secure the future of the
Canada pension plan. We dare you to destroy the Canada pension
plan. We dare you to weaken the Canada pension plan''.
Government members have listened to those people and we have
responded. We have done exactly that. We have secured the future
of the Canada pension plan. We have done that because Canadians
have told us that we must show that we have a social conscience
and that we have a collective responsibility to each other, which is
totally unlike the Reform Party of Canada. That party believes in a
kind of pernicious individualism; everybody for themselves; the
law of the jungle, that we do not care for each other.
Those are not our values. They are not the values of Canadians.
They are certainly not the values of the elderly citizens of this
country. We support the Canada pension plan.
8410
Of course the Reform Party neglects to say that the
contributions to the CPP will be increased over a period of six
years. The premiums have been increased because we want to
secure the future of the CPP. That is exactly what we have done.
Mr. Williams: Mr. Speaker, let me say to the hon. member that I
would be more than glad to visit the seniors in his riding. However,
if I went to explain the Liberal policy, I feel that I would not last too
long in that senior citizens home.
This is the Liberal plan which was announced by the Minister of
Finance a year ago. This is not a Reform plan. It is not my plan and
it is not the plan of the parliamentary secretary. This plan was
announced by the Minister of Finance. Let me go over it again.
Old age security is completely gone. The guaranteed income
supplement is gone. The $3,500 tax free for seniors is gone. The
first $1,000 of pension income for seniors is gone. These four
things are gone completely. In their place will be a seniors benefit.
(1640)
I explained it before but in case the parliamentary secretary did
not get it quite clear, let me say it again. If the retired people in the
seniors home in his riding only have the seniors benefit and Canada
pension plan, the Minister of Finance will take half the Canada
pension plan. That is the Liberal proposal. That is why I would get
run out of that seniors citizens home if I started to explain Liberal
policy.
The parliamentary secretary stands and says: ``We secured the
CPP''. Let me also say that he secured the MPPP, the MPs pension
plan that he participates in and which he has secured for himself. It
will pay tens of thousands of dollars to him each and every year
while the government will pay a mere pittance to other seniors
which it will tax back if it ever thinks they are going to make any
money. But there is no clawback and no tax back on the MP
pension plan. Oh, no. We would not want that would we?
The member stands and says that he has secured the pension
plan. He has secured a better one for himself, a lot better for
himself, a great deal better for himself. We have heard of the tens
of thousands of dollars that some MPs are going to collect. That is
the hypocrisy.
Mr. John Murphy (Annapolis Valley-Hants, Lib.): Mr.
Speaker, I will be sharing my time with the member for
Mississauga West.
It is a great pleasure to rise in my place today to speak in support
of our government's 1997 budget. This budget reflects the very
values and institutions that we cherish as Canadians. It highlights
our commitment to health care, to improved access to education
and training opportunities, and to working to improve the
well-being of children and our young people.
It is a budget that underscores the principles of fairness and
putting people first. It contains important measures that will give
more Canadians the opportunity to participate fully and actively in
the life of our country. This is not just a Liberal budget, it is a
budget that we as Canadians can be proud of.
When our government took office in 1993, the nation's finances
were in disarray. The deficit stood at $42 billion, unemployment
was at 11.4 per cent and the very future of our social programs was
under threat. What a difference four years have made. This year our
deficit will be no higher than $19 billion and in 1998-99 our
government will no longer need to borrow new money from our
financial markets. In short, we are regaining our financial
sovereignty.
The people of my riding of Annapolis Valley-Hants have made
sacrifices over the last few years in the name of deficit reduction.
All Canadians have been made to do with less in terms of federal
programs and services. Many of my constituents have reminded me
that deficit reduction does have a human face. They have said: ``If
you cut programs indiscriminately, real people and families will
suffer''. That is why I am proud of our government's approach to
deficit reduction. By moving at a responsible pace, we have
dramatically reduced our deficit while preserving Canada's social
safety net.
I have always seen our deficit reduction efforts as a means to a
greater end. While we must continue to follow a path of fiscal
prudence and responsibility, we can now see a light at the end of the
tunnel. We now have a certain amount of flexibility to invest in the
future of our people and in the future of Canada.
Let us take a moment to look at the troubling level of child
poverty and how this impacts upon Canada. Last December I had
the opportunity to participate in a prebudget debate in this House.
At that time I joined with colleagues from all sides of the House in
stating unequivocally that the rate of child poverty in Canada was
unacceptably high.
(1645 )
Too many Canadian children are not getting the start they need to
become healthy, happy and productive adults. This is not only a
personal tragedy but is a loss for a nation as a whole. Our
government is taking important steps to address these problems.
As the Minister of Finance announced in his remarks on
Tuesday, our government is committed along with our provincial
counterparts to a new cross-Canada child benefit system. We will
increase federal spending on children by $850 million by July
1998. This includes $600 million of new money on top of the $250
million announced in last year's budget.
Under the new approach the new Canada child tax benefit will go
to all eligible families, those working and those on welfare. That
will allow provincial governments to take some of the money they
currently spend on welfare and redirect it into the services and
programs for working poor families, such as in the area of child
8411
care. As the Minister of Finance also said in his budget speech,
there can be no more worthy effort that a new partnership on behalf
of Canada's children.
I also want to endorse our government's hundred million dollar
commitment to two important programs. I am referring of course to
the community action program for children and the prenatal
nutritional program. I have seen firsthand the benefits of proactive
early childhood health programs. I can say unequivocally that these
programs are truly making a difference for children and families
across Canada.
In the months leading up to the budget I worked closely with the
Nova Scotia Association of Family Resource Projects in its effort
to create greater awareness and understanding of the benefits of
this type of programming. I brought its concerns to Ottawa and to
this House. I am pleased that the government is responding to the
needs of Canada's children.
I want to take the opportunity to thank all of those front line
workers and volunteers who work so diligently to make these
programs successful both in Annapolis Valley-Hants and in the
communities across this country.
Our commitment to health care does not stop there. Our
government will also provide $150 million over the next three
years to help the provinces put in place projects that will enable
them to test new ways in which our health system can be improved.
Projects could include new approaches to home care, drug
coverage and other innovations.
Prior to entering the field of politics my entire working life was
spent in the health field. I know that health care ingenuity has
excelled in my riding. I also know that when it comes to new ideas
and better ways to deliver health care services the professionals and
the citizens living and working in Annapolis Valley-Hants will
rise to the forefront.
I would like now to turn for a moment to discuss the important
topics of jobs and growth and particularly our efforts in rural
Canada. Annapolis Valley-Hants, as the House knows, is
predominately a rural riding. Those of us who live in rural
communities face unique challenges as we work to preserve and
enhance economic opportunities.
I was pleased therefore to listen to the Minister of Finance as he
committed our government to ensure that rural Canada has every
opportunity to fully participate in everything this government has
to offer. Let me show some of the facts.
Our government is making a $50 million investment in the Farm
Credit Corporation. We are investing $45 million over three years
in the Canadian Tourism Commission. We are contributing an
additional $30 million to the community access program. Our
government is raising the ceiling under the Small Business Loans
Act from $12 billion to $14 billion and we are reducing the paper
burden for small businesses by allowing many of them to file
quarterly reports rather than monthly reports.
This will greatly reduce their costs, their time burden and they
will be able to hold their money longer.
(1650)
All of these measures, combined with the initiatives such as the
extension of the infrastructure program, the $350 million youth
employment program and the extension of the residential
rehabilitation assistance program, will effectively respond to the
challenges facing rural Canada and allow for more innovation and
growth, both in my riding and in communities and businesses
across this country.
Knowledge and education are the key to long term economic
success for any nation. This is again part of the infrastructure that
we are investing into as government. Our government recognizes
that by investing in education and innovation now we will see a
tremendous payback over the long term.
Last November I attended a student rally at Acadia university in
my riding. At this event many students told me that one of the
greatest problems they faced was a growing personal debt burden. I
brought these concerns back to Ottawa and joined with many of my
colleagues here in addressing the question how to help students and
families cope with the costs.
Our government has taken a number of important measures and
as a result of this budget federal support for post-secondary
education will increase by $137 million in 1997. We are doubling
the annual contribution limits for the registered education savings
plan. We have introduced provisions to allow students to carry
forward unused education credits indefinitely. We are doubling the
educational tax credit and we have extended interest relief on
student loans for those who are unable to make their payments
from 18 to 30 months.
As well, our government is establishing the Canada Foundation
for Innovation. I belief this program is tailor made for Nova
Scotians and institutions such as Acadia University,
pharmaceutical companies and health institutions, all of which are
in my riding. This program will help Canada's research
infrastructure.
This budget builds on our previous efforts and sets a clear course
for a brighter future. A course that will-
The Deputy Speaker: The hon. member's time has expired.
[Translation]
Mr. Antoine Dubé (Lévis, BQ): Mr. Speaker, I listened
carefully to the comments of the member for Annapolis
Valley-Hants.
8412
Naturally, since he is on the government side, he is trying very hard
to sell that budget to Canadians.
I would like to ask if he feels comfortable knowing that the
Minister of Finance's deficit reduction, his great accomplishment,
has been achieved thanks to the $5 billion cuts in unemployment
insurance and the $4.5 billion cuts in transfers to the provinces.
He speaks about the measures implemented by the government,
but we say they are a mere pittance, nothing but election goodies.
He speaks about farm credit, but I must remind the House that farm
credit does not mean grants; it means credit and therefore, debt.
The figures represent loans and not costs for the government. The
government simply makes the money available, but the amounts
have to be paid back.
As far as students are concerned, I was in charge of the youth
portfolio until a few months ago and I can tell the House the
situation for young people is appalling; they are loaded down with
debts. What measures is the government taking? It is giving the
students more time before they have to start paying back their
loans. That will not solve the problem of student debt, it will not
help reduce the high number of student bankruptcies in Canada.
There is something missing and that something is job creation.
I wonder if the member is comfortable with that idea. He comes
from a rural area and he must realize that, in the end, most of the
cuts were made at the expense of the provinces and the needy.
[English]
Mr. Murphy: Mr. Speaker, I thank my colleague for the
question.
He talks about the deficit. We need to get that deficit down. If we
did not get that deficit down more we would have had to do more
cutting in our transfer payments. That is a given.
We have started to get it down. Because we have it down, we can
now use our efforts of deficit cutting as a spring board to begin
creating more opportunities for people, applying the budget more
to the needs of people. We have done this.
(1655)
He raises the question of the Farm Credit Corporation and $50
million. It would be nice if we could have done more, but it is a
beginning, a reinvestment, a turning around of some of the savings
that people have struggled with to help the Canadian government to
bring down the deficit.
Our farmers are very innovative. I do not know about the farmers
in his area, but the farmers in my area are very innovative and they
will be able to use the money to create more opportunities to build
their businesses and hire more people. As an end result there will
be more growth and more people will pay income tax.
We have a number of examples. In our budget we have tried to
put in place spring board opportunities for people to get on with
developing the economy.
I would ask the hon. member to take a look at those initiatives in
a positive fashion.
[Translation]
The Deputy Speaker: It is my duty, pursuant to Standing Order
38, to inform the House that the questions to be raised tonight at the
time of adjournment are as follows: the hon. member for Parry
Sound-Muskoka, rural development; the hon. member for
London-Middlesex, housing.
[English]
Mrs. Carolyn Parrish (Mississauga West, Lib.): Mr. Speaker,
it is my pleasure today to speak in favour of the Liberal
government's 1997 budget.
This budget, the fourth of the Liberal government, is likely the
one that defines the true nature of the Liberal government,
balancing the needs of fiscal health with the concerns about key
social issues.
Over the past three and a half years it is clear that the economic
priority of the government is deficit reduction. We are the first
government in history to have seriously attacked the deficit and
wrestled this country's finances under control.
Previous governments talked about deficits while continuing to
overspend. We acted. In 1993 our finances rivalled those of third
world countries. We spent fully $42 billion more than we took in, 6
per cent of gross domestic product. In fact, throughout its stay in
office the previous Tory government was overspending its budget
by approximately 30 per cent every year.
This year the deficit will be no higher than $19 billion and by
1998-99 it is projected to stand at $9 billion or about 1 per cent of
gross domestic product. In four short years a balanced budget is
finally within our grasp.
How did we work this magic, a magic that eluded the best Tory
minds? We have stopped spending more than we earned. We cut
government spending and began to live within our means. Canada
is now on a clear path toward fiscal health and is the envy of most
of the world's industrialized nations.
Renewed confidence in the Canadian economy has also helped to
keep interest rates down, 19 reductions over the last 20 months. In
the last year alone short term interest rates fell 5 percentage points.
The prime rate is at its lowest since 1956. For the first time in more
than decade interest rates are lower in Canada than they are in the
United States.
Our current deficit reduction course has increased investor
confidence, allowing interest rates to decline. Lower interest rates
make it easier for consumers to buy homes and durable goods and
8413
for businesses to invest in new facilities, equipment and
employees.
The economy as a whole is benefiting. Exports are at record
highs, successive Team Canada missions have attracted $22 billion
in deals for Canadian business. Exports account for 37 per cent of
our GDP. The importance of trade to this country's economy is
more than obvious. It is estimated that for every $1 billion in
exports we have 11,000 to 12,000 quality jobs in Canada. In 1997
Canada's economy will grow faster and have a higher job creation
rate than any other G-7 country, including the U.S. A sustained and
successive attack on the deficit inspires world confidence, world
trade and world envy.
Many have urged the government over the recent months to ease
the purse strings and to announce major increases in expenditure.
Some see the light at the end of the tunnel and want to start
spending. I do not agree with these people. I believe that major
spending increases at this time would send the wrong message to
the international community and to the Canadian public. It would
tell Canadians that the hard work we have invested into reducing
the size of government can all be negated, that past efforts should
be undone. It also threatens to undermine our deficit reduction
strategy prematurely, quitting in the last hours of a long and
tiresome job, a job that is not quite done. It would also cause many
old Tory wags to nod sagely: ``There goes those tax and spend
Liberals again buying the next election''.
(1700)
The deficit battle has inevitably affected some more than others.
It is our responsibility as good government and as good Liberals to
respond to those affected. To this end, the government has targeted
key areas for investment. It is this type of targeted funding that
leads to real impact, real changes and real solutions to social
problems.
Among the announced initiatives are increased tax assistance to
students, the creation of a foundation to support research
infrastructure, investment to aid in the reform of Canadian health
care, an increase in the child tax benefit and an increase in
incentives for charitable giving.
The time has ended for throwing money at problems. This fourth
in a series of responsible budgets shows us government spending
must be clear, concise, planned and focused.
From 1985 to 1991, I served as a trustee on the appeal board of
education, several years as chair. At that time, budgetary pressures
were beginning to set in and it was clear that new strategies would
have to be adopted. During my stay, along with some other
colleagues, I suggested the administration implement rolling
budget targets, setting spending goals at least two years in
advance, not only as a constraint on board spending but as a
realistic monitor of financial progress. We were unsuccessful at
that time.
We have only to look at the current difficulties of school boards
in Ontario to see where the lack of long term planning and
preventive action have taken them. They have learned painfully
that one can no longer live for today. One must continually plan for
tomorrow, as the Minister of Finance has done.
Our current level of unemployment is still unacceptable. We
should be doing better. But if there is anything we have learned in
the last decade it is that throwing money into random job creation
programs is not a long term solution. Governments cannot create
jobs. They can create, foster and maintain the conditions necessary
for a healthy economy in which the private sector can create jobs.
In fact, our successful fiscal management has done just that.
Economists are predicting the economy will grow over 3 per cent
in 1997 and 1998 creating between 600,000 and 700,000 new jobs
over that period. In fact, since the government took office and put
this country's finances back on track, the Canadian economy has
created 715,000 new, primarily full time jobs.
Earlier I spoke of Canada as a model of modern economic
change. Canada is making the most headway in deficit reduction
and, at the same time, realizing the best job creation record in the
G7 this year. Government overspending leads to economic ruin.
Fiscal management leads to economic growth.
There are other alternatives in this budget that I would like to
talk about a bit more specifically. I have been supporting for some
time now the idea of targeted tax reductions to benefit children. I
was an active supporter of the recent private member's bills
initiated by the member for Mississauga South both on increasing
the child care expense deduction and creating a tax credit for stay at
home caregivers.
Children need proper resources and proper care in order to
flourish in this society. Any level of child poverty is intolerable.
We must do all we can to improve assistance to children of low
income families. This budget has proposed a spending increase in
the child tax benefit of $600 million annually in addition to the
$250 million announced in the 1996 budget. The budget will also
enrich the working income supplement by $195 million.
These measures are all specifically targeted to low income
families to improve living conditions for Canadian children and
give low income families the support they need to stay in the
workforce rather than rely on continued public assistance.
The second area of particular interest is the voluntary and
charitable sector in Canada. In 1995, I chaired a caucus
subcommittee looking at government grants and contributions,
primarily to
8414
the volunteer sector. Our committee met with many charitable
groups, including the National Volunteer Organization and the
Canadian Centre for Philanthropy. They realized that reductions in
government grants and contributions were both necessary and
inevitable as governments scale down across the board.
The committee agreed that scarce government funds should also
be more specifically targeted and that reform of granting process
was needed. The government should consider ways to stimulate
private charitable giving while it continues to reduce direct
funding.
This budget recognizes that the charitable and voluntary sectors
in Canada are extremely valuable to our social well-being. While
we cannot continue to provide increased direct funding to these
organizations, we must make every effort to ensure this sector does
not die.
The 1997 budget increases the amount of donations for which a
person can claim a tax credit from 50 per cent to 75 per cent of
income. Further, this budget has facilitated larger charitable
donations, putting the Canadian system on par with the U.S.
(1705 )
We have also reduced the rate at which capital gains on
charitable donations are calculated from 75 per cent to 37.5 per
cent. These measures will encourage private charitable giving and
ensure that the charitable and voluntary sectors in Canada have
access to the funds they need to remain in operation.
Additional measures announced in the budget will address the
question of accountability in Canada's third sector by giving
Revenue Canada additional resources to ensure charities comply
with the Income Tax Act and by increasing the availability of
information filed by charities. These are measures which many of
us have been calling for for some time.
For the benefit of my constituents, I would like to address the
GST question. Over the past year I have proposed that the
government should use the savings generated by its beating
successive deficit targets-about $5 billion-to reduce the GST by
two points or 30 per cent. In fact, I have been saying that the
government should make this reduction since the summer of 1995.
I believe reducing the GST by one-third would stimulate retail
spending and provide some relief to Canadians without undoing all
of the hard work we have accomplished since we took office.
However, the Minister of Finance took the time to personally
explain to me why this will not work.
While we may be able to afford to do it in year one and year two,
by year three we would not have the money to continue. In short,
we cannot absorb the revenue loss. I accept his explanation.
I have always maintained that we should remain on our present
course of deficit reduction. In fact, we have not saved $5 billion.
We are still paying off horrendous national debts.
As my responsibility to the constituents of Mississauga West I
brought this proposal to caucus, I fought for it and I learned about
its deficiencies. That is the essence of dialogue.
In conclusion, I would like to congratulate the Minister of
Finance on yet another outstanding budget. I am pleased to have
the opportunity to speak on its merits.
[Translation]
Mr. Antoine Dubé (Lévis, BQ): Mr. Speaker, perhaps I will
give the hon. member an opportunity to complete what she meant
to say by asking my questions.
Listening to her, I felt she had great concern for the family and
for children, which is laudable. I also heard her talk about her
attempts to have the finance minister soften his position about the
GST. I have some questions in this respect.
As a member of Parliament, is she sensitive to the requests of
Bloc members who want to obtain for Quebec the same
compensation, which would amount to $2 billion, as that granted to
the maritime provinces with regard to the GST? That was my first
question.
My other question deals with the amounts provided for children.
Does the hon. member think that another $33 for every child living
in poverty is enough? Will this really improve the situation of
children?
It is all very well to talk about millions of dollars, but we know
that 1.5 million children are living below the poverty level in
Canada. That is a lot of people. We may sometimes talk about
amounts like $200 million, but when this amount is divided among
all recipients, it does not look so impressive.
Therefore, I would ask the hon. member whether she is really
satisfied and whether she really thinks that this will improve the
situation of poor children in Canada.
[English]
Mrs. Parrish: Mr. Speaker, I thank the member opposite for his
question.
As a parent, as a responsible Canadian and as a former teacher,
any form of child poverty is intolerable. The Minister of Finance
mentioned that when he presented his budget.
The 1.5 million Canadian children that live in poverty are a
blight on all of us. However, the situation was not created overnight
and it cannot be repaired overnight. The minister has made it very
clear that it is a serious concern of the government. However,
unless we get the deficit under control, unless we get the economy
back in shape and get everything in order, there will be more than
1.5 million children in poverty.
8415
We are trying to do what good government does. It is a
balancing act. It is repairing the deficit damage which will hurt
more children, while slowly turning the corner to help as many
children as we can.
It is a start and we will do much better as the economy gets
stronger and stronger.
(1710 )
Mr. John English (Kitchener, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, I have a
question for the member for Mississauga West. She has often
commented on the GST. Could she comment on the Ontario
provincial government's attitude and her own attitude toward the
question of the GST?
Mrs. Parrish: Mr. Speaker, I welcome the opportunity to
comment on the GST and Ontario's attitude toward it.
The government is working very hard to come up with a proper
harmonization position with Ontario. I recall that the premier in
Ontario said when he was running for election that the first order of
business would be to come up with a harmonized tax with the
federal government. He seems to have forgotten that promise so I
am going to do all I can to encourage him to harmonize, as he
should do so all the residents of Ontario can benefit.
[Translation]
Mr. Maurice Bernier (Mégantic-Compton-Stanstead,
BQ): Mr. Speaker, I am pleased to participate in this debate on the
budget speech. As some of my colleagues might expect, I have a
number of comments to make on the budget measures that impact
specifically on persons with disabilities.
The budget tabled in the House by the Minister of Finance this
week contains a number of measures aimed specifically at persons
with disabilities. The Bloc Quebecois will look at these measures
to determine whether or not, in our opinion, the proposed measures
meet the expectations of the organizations representing persons
with disabilities and address to a reasonable extent the problems
faced by persons with disabilities in Canada and Quebec.
Let me preface my speech on persons with disabilities by a few
more general remarks. All observers agree that the budget tabled
by the Minister of Finance this week is nothing but smoke and
mirrors. The primary purpose of this budget is to be used as an
election platform in the next campaign, to show all our fellow
citizens across Canada and Quebec that this government did fulfil
its commitments, so that it can, in all good faith, ask the voters to
put their faith in it again and get re-elected.
In fact, the finance minister's budget is part of an advertising
campaign launched by the government. Unfortunately, on closer
scrutiny, we realize that it is misleading advertising. If the Minister
of Finance, and his budget in particular, were subject to the Quebec
consumer protection act, charges could be laid for misleading
advertising.
What we must realize about this budget is that, what is important
in this budget is not what it says, what it does not say or anything
that was said previously. We know that the budget before us is
nothing but a good news budget, aimed at convincing our fellow
citizens that the problems are solved and that the deficit will be
eliminated within a few years, thanks to the government's efforts
within its own administration.
The reality is that the cuts made to social programs in the past
three budgets, the cuts made to transfer payments to the provinces,
will limit the provinces' ability to meet the needs of the most
disadvantaged and, as a result, make our fellow citizens poorer than
they were when this government assumed power in 1993.
(1715)
That is the reality. That is not what the budget says, but it is the
reality. The government acknowledges this, because it
acknowledges that today there are 1.5 million children living in
poverty, 500,000 more than when it came to power in 1993. The
measures announced, moreover, do nothing to solve this problem in
any way. We shall return to this point.
Essentially, this is a smoke-and-mirrors budget, which has only
one objective: to convince our fellow citizens on the eve of an
electoral campaign that all of the problems are settled and that we
are now entering an era of prosperity. Two days after the tabling of
the budget, nobody has been taken in.
We saw the reaction of most analysts, and I am convinced that
the public's reaction will be similar. These people realized that,
even though the finance minister tears his hair out every day during
oral question period, even though he whines a lot, the plight of our
fellow citizens is not getting any better.
Think about the disabled and take a look at the impact of the
decisions made in that budget. Requests tmade for years by just
about every organization representing people with disabilities were
behind the recommendations of the Standing Committee on Human
Rights and the Status of Persons with Disabilities, in a unanimous
report tabled in this House in December 1995. In other words, the
official opposition and the Reform Party essentially supported the
recommendations contained in that report.
It is worth taking a look at these recommendations, to see
whether the government delivered. These recommendations
provided, among other things, that the Government of Canada
should designate a minister or a secretary of state to be responsible
for the status of persons with disabilities. What was the
government's response to that request? The Minister of Human
Resources Development was designated as the person responsible
for this issue.
8416
Given the decisions made by that minister, and particularly the
conception he has of his department's role, we can only conclude
that people with disabilities are even worse off than they were
when there was no one to speak for them.
Another recommendation provided that, each year, a report
should be tabled in the House to review the status of requests made
by people with disabilities. We are waiting for that report. I
certainly hope that in the coming months we will see a document
from the government explaining what has actually been done.
We also requested that a more liberal, in the good sense of the
word, interpretation be allowed in the application of the tax credit
so that the disabled could truly benefit. What we saw, and
unfortunately continue to see, is a somewhat restrictive
application, with the result that a good number of the disabled are
not able to take advantage of the tax credits offered by the
government.
It is one thing to say: ``We are going to propose new tax credits,
to improve existing credits''. It is quite another to see how these
measures are applied. In other words, how many people can take
advantage of them? And, more to the point, how many people
cannot take advantage of them, despite the fact that they are
recognized as disabled.
(1720)
Then, there are other recommendations concerning, for example,
grants to disabled persons organizations; I will come back to this.
The recommendations we made were partially taken into account.
Following this report, the then Minister of Human Resources
Development, now Minister of National Defence, who must have
been getting ready for his new role, literally threw the human rights
committee's recommendations out the window. Not only did he not
take them into account, but he literally gave them the axe. And
since he is now the defence minister, I should say he used a
bazooka to completely eliminate any grants to disabled persons
organizations. This was the decision taken by the former Minister
of Human Resources Development, now the defence minister, over
a year ago. The disabled community was utterly dismayed.
Following protests by representatives of organizations and by
the official opposition, which hounded the government in this
House, a committee was formed. This committee tabled its report
last fall and recommendations are also contained in the present
budget.
Unfortunately, although the hon. member for
Fredericton-York-Sunbury, who headed this committee, worked
in good faith, and showed considerable openness to organizations
of disabled persons, we in the official opposition spoke out against
the committee because it included no representation from either the
official opposition or the Reform Party. In our opinion, therefore, it
was a partisan committee to which, fortunately, representatives of
organizations for the disabled were added, and this has made it
possible for it to come up with some recommendations which
reflect reality.
Today, then, we find ourselves faced with a certain number of
measures I would like, if I may, to comment on one by one, since
that is the main purpose of my speech.
First of all, it is stated that the tax credits of the past will
continue unchanged. They will continue, and the disabled will be
able to take advantage of them, as in the past. But, as I have just
said, if the Minister of Revenue and her officials continue to apply
the various tax credits in a restrictive way, the net result will be that
the disabled will be as badly off as they were in the past.
What we want from this government-and the Minister of
Finance has not given us any reassurance in this area-is for
someone to tell us how the tax credits referred to in this budget will
be applied. This was recommended by both the human rights
committee and the Liberal committee set up later. It had been
decided to improve the tax credit for medical expenses.
Naturally, four or five measures are referred to. They speak of
adapting vehicles, where expenses will be exempt up to a ceiling of
$5,000, and the purchase of an air conditioner, to a ceiling of
$1,000. By the way, the recommendation made by the committee
chaired by the hon. member for Fredericton-York-Sunbury
wanted this tax credit to apply to any kind of material assistance
and not just to air conditioners, for instance. Surprisingly, the
Minister of Finance took the example used in the recommendation
and included it in his speech or his budget, without considering all
the other equipment that is absolutely indispensable for people
with disabilities.
I do not know whether this was an oversight or ignorance of the
needs of people with disabilities, but air conditioners are fine,
except that right now air conditioners are not terribly useful. There
are a lot of other material aids that are just as important.
There is also a reference to access ramps. The purpose is, of
course, to help people with disabilities when they have to leave
their homes to go about their usual business like anyone else. If
they have to go to class or to go work, they have to be able to do so.
(1725)
There is also a reference to those who care for people with
disabilities. These measures will be an improvement for all
Canadians, with the exception of persons with disabilities in
Quebec. Why do I say this? Because I know Liberal members will
say the Bloc Quebecois is complaining again, that it thinks
Quebecers are being mistreated by the federal government. Well, it
is true. Today, during question period, I heard the Minister of
Human Resources Development say that Quebec was getting more
than its share of
8417
federal funding, that Quebecers were cry babies and spent most of
their time complaining with a full stomach.
Some hon. members: It is true.
Mr. Bernier (Mégantic-Compton-Stanstead): I hear our
Liberal colleagues say that is true. I hope they repeat that during
the election campaign.
I said, regarding the tax credits given for adapting vehicles,
building access ramps and the purchase of specialized equipment,
that a program already exists in Quebec, a universal program that
applies to all citizens of Quebec, irrespective of their income, and
covers the total cost of these special needs. This means Quebecers
are going to pay twice: they will pay 100 per cent of the cost for
residents of Quebec and part of the cost for people living outside
Quebec, through the tax credit.
I hope that my colleague from Fredericton-York-Sunbury
will respond to this request when it is his time to speak on the
budget. I hope that the federal government will compensate Quebec
for this measure, which, I repeat, will penalize Quebec taxpayers,
since services will be paid for twice, and people with disabilities in
Quebec are already totally covered for these needs.
Mr. Speaker, you say I have three minutes left. I want to use
them to talk of the opportunities fund. There will no doubt be
questions allowing me the opportunity to talk more about it. One of
the things requested by groups of persons with disabilities was the
retention of national standards on work adjustment programs and
measures giving them greater access to the job market.
The Bloc Quebecois objected to this measure because it
considers that manpower training, workplace adjustment and
material assistance to people with disabilities are provincial
matters from which the federal government should withdraw, as it
says it wants to, instead of creating new funds to intervene in areas
of provincial jurisdiction.
Even if we see that this fund could help people with disabilities
return to work, its application is very limited. Let me explain.
First we must obtain the support of the groups representing the
handicapped, the private sector and the provincial governments.
Immediately it is clear that this fund could take months or years to
see the light of day, if it ever does. So it is easy to set an amount
when it will certainly never be spent. However, if it did get spent
one day, it would be in areas of provincial jurisdiction and it would
be an experiment. That is essentially what they are saying.
(1730)
Apparently, the fund will be used to finance the development of
strategies to eliminate barriers preventing Canadians from getting
back onto the job market. Developing strategies will not resolve the
unemployment problem, with a rate of unemployment of more than
40 per cent among persons with disabilities. These are not the kind
of measures that will help them.
What the government should do, first of all and as soon as
possible, is transfer manpower to Quebec and other interested
provinces and put in place real training programs for persons with
disabilities, programs that take their limitations into account by
adapting work stations and, more importantly, ensuring that they
can get jobs matching their abilities. That is what is required.
Unfortunately, that is not what we find in this budget.
I realize that my time is up. I will conclude on this, but I would
like to add that I hope to get a few questions to give me an
opportunity to elaborate.
[English]
Mr. Andy Scott (Fredericton-York-Sunbury, Lib.): Mr.
Speaker, I welcome the opportunity to comment on the comments
made by my friend from the Bloc and I recognize immediately his
genuine commitment in this area. We are co-members of the
parliamentary committee and I admire his genuine dedication to
the cause of this community. Having said that, we do disagree on
some things.
I would bring to his attention the fact that when he asks about
what more there may be to come I would go directly to the budget
speech where the Minister of Finance said: ``These measures are a
step on the way to a better life for many thousands of our fellow
citizens''. I am sure the Minister of Finance is quite prepared to be
reminded that this is just a step as we move into subsequent
budgets that I am sure this government will be around to present.
One of the questions that was put by my friend had to do with the
fact that perhaps the opportunities fund was speaking to a matter of
provincial jurisdiction. The way that the fund has been designed is
to be very collaborative with the provincial governments, to share
information between provincial governments, to work with
provincial governments because clearly this is a challenge to all
levels of government. It is very important that the member realize
to what extent this is a collaborative effort and not one imposed by
the federal government.
On the question of real costs and the complaints that have been
placed against the tax credits in the past, that the interpretation of
their application has been too rigid, there are two points. First, the
minister responsible, my colleague will remember when she
appeared before the parliamentary committee, made a commitment
that she has made to me many times that the department would
exercise maximum compassion in interpreting theses. She has
appeared before our group since that time to repeat that
commitment.
8418
I would also suggest that the member be aware that the changes
to the tax system that were announced in the budget and that were
recommended by the task force for the most part are very
measurable. The are real costs under the medical services expense
credit and therefore the vagueness of more definitional kinds of
credits does not apply.
The member referred to the parliamentary committee report and
what it asked for as against the government's task force that I
chaired. The fact is most of the people who were critical of the task
force report were critical on the grounds that obviously the
government was not going to act on it because it was pretty much
the same material as was contained in the parliamentary report that
the government had not acted on so therefore what is the point?
(1735)
The reality is that the government, in this case, has acted on our
report and many of the measures it did act on were measures the
parliamentary committee had recommended last year. The
government made a mistake by not acting on that report. We
acknowledged that and that is why the task force was struck and
most of those things have been restored.
Very specifically, the funding for organizations, for enhanced
citizenship in the communities and for integration were all
restored. VRDP, vocational rehabilitation of disabled persons, was
extended for another year. These are all things that the member had
been pushing for in the many questions to the former minister of
human resources development.
I am getting to a question for my colleague. I sincerely hope that
my colleague could tell me which of the recommendations of the
task force or the parliamentary committee he would priorize as the
one that we should go after next.
[Translation]
Mr. Bernier (Mégantic-Compton-Stanstead, BQ): Mr.
Speaker, before answering the question from the hon. member for
Fredericton-York-Sunbury, I want to comment briefly on his
remarks. First, the hon. member acknowledges that the government
and the human resources minister at the time, the current Minister
of National Defence, made monumental mistakes which,
unfortunately, were endorsed by the government.
Thanks to representations made by organizations looking after
people with disabilities, and also by the official opposition, the
government finally realized the enormity of these errors, and some
changes were made in the funding provided to these organizations.
I recognize it in the budget. In fact, it was announced last January.
Corrective measures were taken to restore the situation to what it
was before 1996, to restore grants to what they were in 1995.
It is difficult to take for granted that improvements such as these
augur well for the future, that we should rest easy and assume that
the federal government will propose other measures to improve the
lot of the disabled, such as the integration fund, when we know that
the government not only has a tendency to interfere in provincial
jurisdictions, but that it is still actively doing so.
Yesterday, the Prime Minister willingly admitted to
journalists-as can be seen in nearly all of today's daily
newspapers-that the federal government was getting involved in
areas of provincial jurisdiction, but only temporarily, and would
withdraw within a few years. That is really thumbing their noses at
people. They are telling us that the federal government is putting
money into this just to bug the provincial governments and then,
once they have created a need and people come back for more, they
will take pull out and take their money with them. What a hateful
thing to admit to.
In response to my colleague's question as to which priorities
with respect to the disabled the federal government was to be
responsible for, a commitment has been made, and it was made
several times by the Minister of Justice, for instance, to amend
human rights legislation to provide that employers would be
obliged to adapt work stations.
The Minister of Justice said that once the government had dealt
with the matter of same sex couples or sexual orientation and
employment equity, it would introduce amendments to help people
with disabilities enter the labour market. That was one of the
proposals.
(1740)
We, and this includes persons with disabilities, are still waiting
for the legislation, because this is a very practical measure. In fact
any measure, not just experiments, but any measure that will help
people with disabilities get into the labour market will be welcome.
People with disabilities do not want to be treated like people who
cannot participate in the economy and their community. They want
the means to do so. This includes transportation that is adapted to
their needs, which means adapting vehicles and adapting
accommodation, but it also means special training programs.
So the federal government should reach an agreement as soon as
possible with Quebec, as far as the Bloc Quebecois is concerned,
but in fact with all provinces that want to patriate manpower
training and labour market entry assistance, in order to come up
with practical solutions and not just spend money on experiments
or creating task forces.
``We do not want a lot of discussion''. This was the message we
got from people with disabilities, time and time again when my
colleague from Fredericton and his colleagues travelled across
Canada. They said: ``We want no more reports, no more talk, we
want action''.
8419
That is what they expect from this government, and I hope we
will see further measures in the months to come.
[English]
Mr. Joe McGuire (Egmont, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, I will be
sharing my time with the member for Winnipeg South.
It is an honour for me to address the House today on the occasion
of the debate on this historic document, the 1997 federal budget.
There is a light at the end of the tunnel when one reads this budget
and it is not the light of a freight train barrelling toward us. It is the
light of hope which is shining for the future of our country which
includes our young people.
It is interesting to note, especially for our critics on the other
side-it is their job to criticize-that during this whole exercise of
the past three years of deficit cutting, cutting of programs, of
cutting back fairly deeply through the fat and into the bone in our
expenditures on the federal side, the United Nations has
consistently named Canada the number one country in the world.
That is something we should all dwell upon for a few minutes
before we start criticizing the work that our finance minister and
our Prime Minister have done over the past three years.
I will quote from some of the press comments from my province
of Prince Edward Island that the budget has received. The
editorialist from the General Pioneer in Summerside said ``With
our lower than expected deficit, Mr. Martin resisted the pressure to
institute a widespread tax cut. For that he is to be commended. The
cuts that are still working their way through the system have been
hard on all Canadians. A tax cut, although it would be appreciated
at tax time, would simply drive the deficit back up and wipe out
what has been accomplished''.
The editorialist went on to say that there is little doubt this is a
pre-election budget. However, a key qualifier to be added is a
pre-election budget for the 1990s: ``Prime Minister Chrétien and
his finance minister have concluded, and rightly so we suggest, that
Canadians are in no mood for big spending promises that can't
realistically be kept''.
When the editorialist mentioned the pre-election budget for the
1990s, I am sure he was comparing that with pre-election budgets
of the past where governments were tempted to come in with big
spending programs in an effort to buy people's votes with their own
money. Our finance minister in this regard in this election year has
resisted the temptation to buy votes with the people's own money.
This government has accomplished quite a record over the past
number of years. It inherited a $42 billion annual deficit. It
inherited a legacy of high interest rates. It inherited a reputation
among the G7, the western developed countries, and indeed among
other less fortunate countries as being Mexico north.
(1745)
In a short, record setting period of time we have decreased the
deficit 34 per cent in one year. That is probably the biggest deficit
reduction in the shortest time in the history of the world. We are
getting the deficit under control.
We are a stone's throw away from a balanced budget. In the next
couple of years we will see for the first time in many decades a
balanced budget.
The Ottawa Citizen led off its editorial after the budget by
saying: ``The finance minister, Paul Martin, deserves real credit, if
not necessarily for yesterday's budget, then for his four years of
fiscal tutelage. His is a record of historic achievement''. I think we
can all agree with what the finance minister has done over the past
four years to earn those accolades.
Let us take a look at some of the budget measures which have
generated a positive response. First I would like to address jobs.
In this budget $2 billion more are being dedicated for small
business to begin, to grow and to create more jobs. In addition, if
businesses use the new hiring program and expand their workforce,
they will have a holiday from paying EI premiums. They will not
have to pay any EI premiums for the first year and they will have a
25 per cent reduction in the second year.
As far as Prince Edward Island is concerned, this measure could
not have come at a better time. There will be $95 million available
for the tourism sector. The new Confederation bridge will be
opening on June 1 and I am sure that every member of the House
will be there.
Normally 700,000 to 800,000 tourist visitors coming to our
province each year. This year we are expecting one million visitors.
A lot of islanders are not yet prepared for the influx of people who
will be visiting our province after the bridge opens. Therefore,
these tourism dollars will come in very handy for a lot of our tourist
operators. They will be able to expand and to begin new tourist
operations to facilitate one million visitors this year.
The infrastructure program will help to create jobs. Some critics
have been very hard on the infrastructure program. They wonder
why we have extended it for another year and why we put another
$425 million into it.
In my riding some of the small communities would not have
been financially able to develop some of their projects if it was not
for federal and provincial money. For example, in the town of
Alberton, in the western end of my riding, $365,000 was generated
to replace sewer lines, sidewalks, paving and ditching. Without the
dollars of the federal initiative, the other two-thirds would not
8420
have been spent. It is certainly a relief for the taxpayers of that
town.
In the village of O'Leary, half a million dollars went into
renovating an old hospital that had been closed. The village needed
a new village office and a new fire station. They were able to access
the infrastructure program and right now they have a beautiful
building.
Also there were small projects in very small districts like St.
Felix, St. Nicholas and St. Louis where anywhere from $8,000 to
$15,000 was spent in much needed community improvement.
In the town of Summerside, which is the largest town in my
riding, there is now a new city of Summerside because of the
amalgamation that took place with Wilmot and St. Eleanors. All
the new money has been added to their share of the infrastructure
program. Well over $2.5 million has been spent there.
A total of 200 jobs have been created in my riding. If anyone
thinks 200 jobs are not needed, then they are sadly mistaken in
criticizing this program.
(1750)
I want to commend the government on its initiative on the
disabled. This initiative was caucus driven, led by the member
from Fredericton who has been working very hard on it. There was
full caucus support for his efforts.
Many of our disabled are helped by expanded tax deductions for
medical expenses. These include increased deductions for part time
attendants, increased deductions for vans used for wheelchair
transportation as well as for medically required air conditioners
and altered driveways. Individuals who come under the umbrella of
the organizations for the disabled in Summerside-Tignish and area
will benefit by the initiatives found in Tuesday's budget.
It is our record of staying the course, of remaining consistent and
focused that has brought us to the point where we can initiate some
selective spending programs. We have turned the corner. The time
of announcing new cuts is over.
We are about to reap the rewards of the sacrifices of the past four
years. The tax cuts that we all want are now possible without
jeopardizing our recovery.
Mr. Reg Alcock (Winnipeg South, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, before I
begin my comments on the budget, I would like to take a moment
to correct the record.
Last Thursday Reform had an opposition day on transportation.
During the debate, the Reform critic for transportation made a
comment that some information he was provided was covered with
marginal notes written by one Moya Greene. He was making the
comment that this was a tragic leak of information, implying
complicity on the part of Ms. Greene. I want to state that, at no
time, was Moya Green ever involved in the preparation of the draft
report.
The marginal notes he got on the draft sent to him were those of
the researcher. For him to slander Ms. Green, who is a very
valuable member of the finance community and who made a very
strong contribution to the work of the round table, is quite
inexcusable. I do not know why the Reform Party has chosen to
take this tack and I am rather saddened by it.
There is not enough time in the few minutes I have to do justice
to the budget, so I want to focus on three or four points. The first is
just a pick-up on the remarks of the previous speaker from the
Bloc.
One of the things that has given me real delight in the work
leading up to this budget has been the involvement of a great many
members from all sides of the House. The Minister of Finance and
cabinet have allowed members to get involved in a variety of
committees that have spent a great deal of time working on specific
problems that ended up as policies.
The clearest example of that is the work by the member from
Fredericton. I served with that member on the first HIV committee,
when we looked at the changes to the Canada assistance plan. At
that time, a concern was raised about what would happen to people
with disabilities. The result was the establishment of the committee
he chaired. He undertook, as is his personal style, to consult and
consult. He worked with people in his community and across
Canada in order to formulate policy that truly represents the wishes
of people. This is a stellar example of that.
He was in my riding. We had a little meeting in my office where
we brought together people from the community. I know this
community well as I have worked with it over the years. Canadians
with disabilities were strongly supportive of the work done by that
committee and are delighted with the announcement in the budget.
They look forward to seeing what the member from Fredericton
will do next on their behalf.
(1755 )
Another area that underlies this attitude on the part of the
government of collaboration and involvement is the work done by
the member for Peterborough, who co-chaired a committee that
worked on support for post-secondary education.
We have a terrible problem with our universities which have
been the recipients to all sorts of offloading by provincial
governments and diversion of federal government support to the
point where many of our great institutions are in serious trouble.
Their infrastructure is crumbling. They have difficulty providing
the kind of labs and support to students to give them a quality
education. For organizations that are such major economic engines,
as a country we have allowed them to fall into a rather sorry state.
During the last election the Liberals made the second largest
financial commitment to provide over the course of four years $1
8421
billion in new money for research and development. I am delighted
to see with this announcement that the Minister of Industry, who
has long advocated this, and the secretary of state for science and
research have finally been able to deliver not just what was
committed but well in excess of that. For the first time we will be
able to offer to universities and labs across the country a strong
infusion of new capital to help them do the work that in the end is
will support all of us. It is going to provide jobs and the intellectual
property that will fuel growth in the next few decades.
One of the problems that arose with universities was the
tendency on the part of provincial governments to divert funds that
the federal government was providing in support of post-secondary
education to other uses. In fact the only province in the country that
can argue that it provided 100 per cent flow through of those funds
from the federal government to the universities is the province of
Quebec. In all other cases those funds were diverted to other uses
and the resultant shortfall offloaded on to students.
In fact one of the most shameful acts of the provincial
government in my province is the way that it has disguised its
withdrawal of support from universities and handed over
responsibility to students.
We made some changes to the student loan program a few years
ago designed to raise the limits and give students a bit more
flexibility in the management of their debt, only to have the
provincial government immediately cancel its grant program and
transfer much of its responsibility for supporting students on to the
federal government. The net result was to put students even further
in debt and give them fewer options for managing that debt.
I am delighted the Minister of Human Resources Development
has taken strong steps to provide direct support to students and
some greater flexibility in the management of their debt load to
right what has been a fairly serious problem that has been created
by provincial governments across the country.
I am a little saddened that we have not yet been able to move to
an income contingent form of repayment. I trust we will continue
to look at that. I know the student associations, certainly in western
Canada, strongly support that and see it as a way of helping
students manage what are to be very large debts on leaving school.
The announcements on child poverty and health are very
welcome. They are important additions and reflect an important
shift in philosophy, from a social service network that many have
challenged as being excessively paternalistic to one that is more
empowering. By putting resources directly in the hands of families
and expecting them to act in the best interests of their children, we
are giving people who are working and trying to get ahead and
build a future for their children some real tools with which to work.
Finally, I want to thank the Minister of Finance for his assistance
with the work of the committee that I chair, the committee on
transport, in dealing with another form of deficit. This is perhaps
best described as the infrastructure deficit.
(1800)
This country has a national highway system some 25,000
kilometres long comprised of the Trans-Canada Highway and a
number of major routes that carry goods between the provinces and
between Canada and the U.S. and to the major ports. It carries 45
per cent of our exports south to the U.S. It carries almost 80 per
cent of tourism which is predicted to grow to be the third largest
industry in Canada by the turn of the century, an industry that runs
on rubber tires.
The highway system is in desperate shape. The entire network
has been studied and studied and studied, to the point that the
provincial auditor in Ontario got involved in looking at the
desperate condition of our major trade routes. In the last year that
we have been working on this topic, every single person who came
to the table said that we needed to do something about that network
of roads. But in a time of restraint the costs are enormous, some
$18 billion to $20 billion to bring the entire system up to standard.
I have been very encouraged by the Minister of Finance and the
President of the Treasury Board. They have worked with the
committee to help us examine some alternative ways in which to
fund infrastructure renewal.
Our infrastructure program has been an enormous success. This
was brought home to me when I met with the Trans-Canada West
Association, a group of mayors from small communities all along
the Trans-Canada Highway in the prairies. They made the point
that when mayors and reeves from across the country gather
together, one thing they talk about is how they spend their little
portion of the infrastructure program in their communities. It is an
activity which has the benefit of putting people to work and also
bringing us together.
That is the same kind of effect we will see when we get to the
work of twinning the Trans-Canada Highway across the country, of
renewing the 25,000 kilometres of roads that tie every community
in the country together. It is work that needs to be done. I was
pleased to see recognition of this by the Minister of Finance in the
budget.
The committee has proposed some innovative ways in which we
could use public and private partnerships to fund the renewal of the
highway system and that we could do it within the existing levels of
expenditure. However, it requires some important changes in the
way in which government does business. That is one of the odd
benefits which can come out of a deficit. Sometimes when there is
8422
such enormous fiscal pressure, we are forced to look at innovative
ways to get the work done.
We cannot allow this infrastructure deficit to continue. We have
to begin to solve the problem. These highways are important. The
highway in Newfoundland and through New Brunswick is
important to the economy of Manitoba. The highway in
Saskatchewan is important to the economy of Ontario. The entire
network is important to the country.
It is estimated that in addition to the work that would be created
by rebuilding this network of roads, there would be over 200,000
new permanent, long term jobs created in Canada by the existence
of a more efficient system of delivery.
I know the Minister of Finance believes as I do that this is an
important issue. I expect in a future budget we will see a creative
solution to the problem.
Mr. Dick Harris (Prince George-Bulkley Valley, Ref.): Mr.
Speaker, let us point out to the hon. member for Winnipeg South
the incredible fuel taxes that the Canadian public and the
commercial users of the highway pay. Of that fuel tax, less than 5
per cent actually gets spent on rebuilding the highway system in
this country.
There has been a massive request for some dedicated money
from fuel taxes to go to fix the highway system. The Liberals have
refused to do that despite cries from the travelling public,
commercial users of the highway and others who use the highway
system. The Liberals have refused to listen to them. They are the
ones who are paying the bills by their fuel taxes and the Liberals
are not using the money to keep the roadways up.
(1805 )
I listened to the member for Winnipeg South talk about how the
provinces are offloading their problems for funding education on to
the backs of the students. Let me remind the member for Winnipeg
South that since the Liberal government took office it has cut back
transfer payments to education and health care by $7.5 billion. The
Liberals have taken out of health care and education transfers and
they have the nerve to stand up and blame the provinces for the
problem. That audacity is beyond belief.
The member for Winnipeg South also talked about how they are
going to extend the payment schedules for the students. I am sure
the students are going to appreciate that a lot. But what they would
appreciate more would be to be able to get a job when they finish
their education, to go out to work and earn some money to pay back
the loans within the time period allowed to them. The fact is there
are 1.5 million Canadians without jobs which is comical
considering that in 1993 this Liberal government ran on jobs, jobs,
jobs and there is about a net zero change in the unemployment rate
in this country.
Instead of offering the students extended terms for paying back
their loans, would it not be wonderful and would the students not
appreciate far more the opportunity to go to work after they finish
their education and pay back the loans like they want to? The
students do not want handouts when they finish their education.
They want jobs. This government has failed miserably in its
responsibility to ensure that an environment is created so that
students can get jobs.
Let me also talk about child poverty. People living below the
poverty line do not want more welfare. They want jobs so that they
can get themselves out of that situation. This extra payment to
combat child poverty is only a drop in the bucket per family, per
child, for those who live in poverty.
It would be far better if the Liberal government did one of two
things. One, it could create better paying jobs for those people so
they could get themselves out of that situation. Two, like the
Reform Party would do, it could take those low income people off
the tax rolls completely. That would be a better solution than the
handouts the Liberal government is talking about here.
The member for Winnipeg South continues with the sleight of
hand deception that this budget represents. It has no credibility.
The member should be standing and defending the Liberal record
on employment and the tax increases that have been created by this
government.
Mr. Alcock: Mr. Speaker, the only thing that lacks credibility in
this House is the platform of the Reform Party. For every complex
problem there is a simple answer and it is usually wrong. I am
reminded of that when I look at the Reform response to these
problems.
We just heard the member say that he would take the punitive $5
billion-it is actually $3.6 billion-and divert it from its current
use which is helping us to try to meet the budget deficit that we
have and put it all into roads. Sure I would love to see those roads
built but I ask the member: What tax would he then dedicate for
hospitals? What tax would he dedicate for jails? Would we not end
up as the state of California did, so bound up in our own rigid
application of tax policy that we would no longer have any
flexibility? We would have no ability to move as a House and
represent the people of this country.
The fact is we have a problem with our road system and we need
to solve that problem. The fact is there has been some very
important work done. What is interesting is that those same people,
the Canadian Automobile Association, the Canadian Trucking
Association, the Canadian Tourism Association, the people who
build the roads and the people who finance the roads were all at that
round table. They sat at that table and they did not say the only
solution to this was to dedicate taxes. They did not adopt the
Reform position. They were not that simplistic. They actually got
down to work-
8423
(1810 )
The Deputy Speaker: The hon. member's time has expired.
Debate, the hon. member for Kootenay East.
Mr. Jim Abbott (Kootenay East, Ref.): Mr. Speaker, if
Canadians ever had any question in their mind about the truth of the
saying Liberal, Tory, same old story, it has been put totally to rest
with this budget.
For the longest time in Canada, unfortunately Canadians have
been subjected to very deceptive political practices, particularly as
we approach an election. We have seen historically where
governments have attempted to make things appear to be what they
are not and particularly to try to buy the votes of the Canadian
public. Canadians are far too intelligent to continue to put up with
that kind of deceptive political practice.
Let me tie the Liberals and Tories together inextricably right
from the word go. We are talking about a bracket creep, and that is
not my opinion of some of the members opposite. In bracket creep
we are talking about something that was actually brought into
effect by the Tories in a budget of theirs in 1988. They basically
deindexed the amount of the basic personal exemption and also
deindexed any increases, unless inflation was over 3 per cent, that
would occur in the tax brackets.
If we were to assume that an individual had a $3,000 job five
years ago, it is quite feasible that the person today, for doing the
same work, in order to have the same buying power that he had five
years ago at $3,000 would have to have $3,600 in income.
Unfortunately, his basic personal exemption of $6,453 in that
period of time has not increased. If his basic personal exemption
had increased, it should be around $7,900. So in fact, this
individual with no change in his buying power from five years ago
to today is now paying tax on an additional $1,450. That was
originated by the Tories in 1988 and was continued by the Liberals
in 1993 which is why I say Liberal, Tory, same old story.
Additionally that individual will find himself suddenly bouncing
up into the next tax bracket. The problem is actually magnified or
doubled because he is not only paying tax on the additional $1,450
but he is paying the tax at a higher rate. Liberal, Tory, same old
story, the same kind of deceptive political practices.
What we are looking at here is not only the continuation of the
Tory practices by this Liberal government, but it has taken this
deception in this whole process to an even higher level. This
government did not even have the intestinal fortitude to bring in the
additional amount of money that is going to be taken off of
Canadians' pay slips every month. It did not have the intestinal
fortitude to include that announcement in this budget.
We are going to be talking about the fact that there have been tax
increases later in my discussion. However the point I am driving at
is that suddenly Canadians are going to be paying 70 per cent more
on their Canada pension plan premium that is being extracted from
their paycheque every month. At the higher level that is an
additional $1,300 a year for which Canadians will receive nothing,
nada, zippo. They will receive absolutely zero in additional
benefits for paying out an additional $1,300 a year. If that is not bad
enough, the problem is that if the Canadian happens to be
self-employed, guess what? They get to pay the employer's portion
of that amount.
This afternoon I was speaking to a newspaper reporter and I
asked how many people were involved in the company overall. The
reporter told me there were about 250. Let us think about this for a
second. That company is now faced with an additional $1,300 a
year it has to contribute to the Canada pension plan times 250
employees. It is going to be paying out an additional $32,500 a year
for absolutely no benefit.
(1815 )
More important, that company will now have to make a decision
to reduce the bottom line of the company by $32,500 or fire
somebody. Unfortunately the company will probably end up
making the worst of the judgments, which is to let somebody go.
This is what is going on here. The young people of Canada on
this CPP issue are getting it in the ear two ways. First they are
getting it in the ear by virtue of the fact that they will be paying our
$1,300 a year more for absolutely no increase. The second
difficulty is that their jobs will be jeopardized because companies
have no way to attract more income in order to come up with the
money for the government in this so-called CPP contribution.
Even for people who are in a lower income bracket, and I mean a
very low income bracket, CPP will still be deducted from their
cheques. They should know that the amount currently being
deducted from their cheques will be increased by 70 per cent. That
means they will have less money to spend.
There is a basic tax grab going on in addition to the CPP, which
this government will never admit to. How can government
members explain that the gross domestic product in Canada, the
sum total of all of the goods and services produced in Canada, in
the past three years, which is the three years this government has
been in this Chamber, has increased by nine and a half per cent?
The total goods and services, everything that can be taxed, has
increased by nine and a half per cent, but guess what? Government
total revenue has increased by twelve and a half per cent. And those
members have the audacity to to try to tell us that this government
has not been taking more money out of the economy. They cannot
refute those numbers.
Taxes cost jobs, and we know that. Take a look. For over 70
consecutive months our unemployment rate in Canada has been
over 9 per cent; it is now at 9.7 per cent. In comparison, our trading
partners have the following unemployment rates: the United
8424
Kingdom is at 6.7 per cent; the United States is at 5.3 per cent;
Japan is at 3.3 per cent. The Liberals cannot walk away from it.
They gave Kim Campbell a rough time in the last election. They
tried to say that she did not know what she was talking about when
she said that the unemployment rate would probably hover around
the 10 per cent level. I recall the current Prime Minister was in
absolute glee when Kim Campbell said that. And what have they
accomplished? They are still at 9.7 per cent, and with no hope
because in the future they will be taking even more money from the
economy.
In terms of deception it does not just stop in the area of taxes. I
cannot imagine the chutzpah of a finance minister who would
actually put out a pamphlet saying that they will be sustaining and
improving health care. They will be putting $300 million back in to
a place where they took $7 billion out. Let us put this into
perspective. Seven billion dollars is seven thousand million
dollars. They took seven thousand million dollars out of the health
care transfers to the provinces; they are putting three hundred of
that seven thousand back, and they say that they are going to
sustain and improve health care. Is this a joke or what? The
chutzpah of this government is absolutely immense.
The government has downloaded this entire problem to the
provinces from the word go. I believe Canadians are intelligent
people. Canadians are not going to be taken in by this. When
Canadians take the time to realize what a chicanery has been
perpetrated on them by the people in government, they will treat it
accordingly in the next election.
(1820 )
Mr. Barry Campbell (Parliamentary Secretary to Minister of
Finance, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, if we are talking about chutzpah, let
us talk about March 1, 1995 when Reform's subamendment asked
members of this House to vote against the Liberal budget because it
did not cut fast enough. They were opposed to the budget because it
did not cut fast enough.
I would like the member to tell this House, to share with us how
it is that he can stand there and criticize the cuts as he just did when
he voted in opposition to the budget because it did not cut fast
enough.
Mr. Abbott: Mr. Speaker, I really appreciated that question
because it is so simple. The government cut in all the wrong places.
Mr. Robert D. Nault (Parliamentary Secretary to Minister of
Human Resources Development, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, if people
were students of history they would recall that we have had right
wing parties in this House before. I recall reading about the debates
that the right wing was talking about when we brought in medicare,
that medicare was going to be a total drain on society, that it would
hurt the economy and that it would take people out of work.
Now we know that the economy quite frankly is considered by
other countries in the world to be one of the best situations because
of medicare in that it helps employers with their bottom lines and it
helps employees.
Also, when we brought in social assistance or welfare as a
national program in this country we had the right wing say the same
thing.
Now we have these people across the way who are suggesting
that because we have improved and made sure and secured because
of the values of the nation our pension plan for future
generations-
An hon. member: Your pension plan.
Mr. Nault: Yes, that is absolutely right, my pension plan. I will
get the Canada pension plan just like everybody else when I retire
and the children of these members here hopefully will get a Canada
pension plan as well.
That is why that particular party is at 11 per cent in the polls and
sliding fast.
If what was said here just a few minutes ago was even close to
being believable, and I want to ask the member this specific
question, why is it that they keeping dropping in the polls? Is it that
we are so good at deceiving Canadians that people do not realize
that we are not doing a good job?
Mr. Abbott: Mr. Speaker, I am so happy this member brought up
his pension plan and the pension plan of all of the other people who
are in this disgusting MP pension plan. They have looked after
themselves all right. They have taken care of themselves and then
they are shafting the Canadian public with this 70 per cent increase.
What I would like to know from any of those members that are
on this fat pension plan is are any of them going to be doing a 70
per cent increase in the premiums they are paying.
The Canadian public right now is paying $4 for every $1 that
these people put in. Right now what is going on is with this increase
of $1,300 a year Canadians are going to be getting less out than
what they are putting in. These people are absolutely disgusting
that they would even bring up their pension plan.
Mr. Nault: Mr. Speaker, he can go on and bluster all he likes but
I just want him to answer a very simple question. If his party's
policies were so believable, why is it that he cannot seem to get
over the 10 per cent mark in popularity with the rest of Canadians?
In Ontario it is 6 per cent and dropping. It does not even go on the
Richter scale.
8425
Mr. Abbott: Mr. Speaker, I will be very happy to see that
member or any other Liberal in my riding. I am not even the
slightest bit concerned, but he should be.
I come back to the medicare issue. He is talking about the fact
that the Liberals brought in medicare. When the Liberals brought in
medicare the federal government promised 50-50 funding to the
provinces. What happened to the 50-50 funding to the provinces? It
slashed, hacked, downloaded to the provinces, still asked the
provinces to do exactly the same things while giving them a 20 cent
dollar instead of a 50 cent dollar.
(1825 )
Mr. Randy White (Fraser Valley West, Ref.): Mr. Speaker, just
for the Liberals over there, I had a wonderful speech all ready to go
and now I have to talk about the MP pension plan.
Is it any wonder people have lost confidence in governments in
this country? The fact is the average Canadian will now have to
work about 30 years and contribute to the Canada pension plan to
get about $9,000 at the end of it. They may even have to work 40
years or more to get about $9,000 at the end. The Liberals say this
is good, that it will help Canadians to live down the road. By that
time $9,000 will mean next to nothing.
Let us have a look to see what the Liberal MPs have done for
themselves. Inside of ten years they qualify for the richest pension
plan in the world. Every one of these people across the way is
gouging the Canadian public with the richest pension plan in the
world.
How much did their premiums go up? Not a red cent. They
expect young people to contribute another $650 every year when
those members are not taking anything out of their pockets. It is
disgusting. How can they call themselves leaders when they are
sucking off the trough? Let us look at how things have changed in
Canada since the Liberals have formed the government.
I must say, for those who are listening, that there is a lot of
rattling going on here. We have touched a nerve. We have touched a
big nerve. It is hard for them to stand and face anybody in this
country, gorging off the trough like they do.
Mr. Nault: Mr. Speaker, on a point of order, there have been a
number of accusations in this House in the last number of years
since this new party came into being, which was going to-
The Deputy Speaker: I would ask the hon. parliamentary
secretary to get to the point very quickly.
Mr. Nault: The point is, Mr. Speaker, I would like to suggest to
the member that he not use the kind of language in the House which
he has just used. That is the reason the situation-
The Deputy Speaker: The hon. member for Fraser Valley West
has the floor.
Mr. White (Fraser Valley West): Mr. Speaker, we have touched
a raw nerve. They are upset because we are saying that they are
gorging off the trough. They do not like it. That is too darned bad. I
will tell you who does not like the big issues. It is the guy working
in this country who is contributing another $650 out of his pocket.
These MPs are contributing nothing more. They are getting three
times as much in less than one-third of the time. If they do not like
it, that is just too darned bad. We will see you all in the next
election. Come to my riding.
Mr. Speaker, they are being noisy again. I like to see how we
touch off nerves, especially when it comes out of their pockets.
Let us look at where Canada has come from and where it is today
as a result of these people being in power. I can remember in 1993
when the debt was around $450 billion. Have they improved the
country since then?
The debt is now bordering on $600 billion. One of the members
over there had the unmitigated gall to stand up and say there is a
light at the end of the tunnel because of the Liberals. The light at
the end of the tunnel is $600 billion, $150 billion more.
(1830)
They got a standing ovation here the other day when the finance
minister said ``we are only borrowing $19 billion this year''. How
does anybody get a standing ovation when they are saying that they
are overspending and borrowing on the backs of Canadians
nineteen thousand million dollars? How on earth do these members
give a finance minister a standing ovation on that? It is sickening.
Where is crime today? Much worse than in 1993. What has this
government done? Virtually nothing.
This country is not better off after three and a half years of
Liberals. I will say who is better off. All the Liberal MPs and the
separatists over here who are gorging off the MP pension plan.
They are better off.
They say that we have cut to the bone. This is a common saying
among these folks. Let us look at some of the money they gave
away last year which is still sitting in the budget.
They gave $987,000 to the National Action Committee on the
Status of Women. That was given out last year, but is still in the
budget this year. Could they not have taken that out this year?
They gave $138,000 to the Canadian conference of teamsters.
Will they repeat that next year? Could they not have said ``there is
your money this year and we will cut that out of the budget next
year''? No. They said that they cut to the bone.
8426
From 1993 to 1996 ACOA handed out a staggering $975
million. People only have to look and read the papers in Atlantic
Canada to understand what happens with ACOA money. Most of
it is a waste.
They give this money year after year. Is there no such thing as
zero based budgeting in this government? What does this
government know about youth and unemployment?
Mr. Easter: Mr. Speaker, I rise on a point of order. The member
is giving false information by suggesting that ACOA is wasting
money.
The Deputy Speaker: As the member knows, that is debate.
That will not come out of the member's time.
Mr. White (Fraser Valley West): Is it not interesting, when we
strike nerves with this group, how they whine about it?
An hon. member: Enjoy it, Randy, it may be one of your last
speeches the way you guys are going in the polls.
Mr. White (Fraser Valley West): Mr. Speaker, one of these
Liberals here is trying to say that this is my last speech because I
may get defeated in an election.
These people better learn how the west feels, how my riding
feels about what I am talking about. We had one and a half million
people unemployed in 1993. Why do they not stand up and tell us
how many we got unemployed today? Are we better off with this
government? We got one and a half million people unemployed
today.
To stand up and tell us they created x number of jobs, they still
have one and a half million people unemployed.
(1835 )
There is one heck of a lot of young people who are
underemployed. In the event that you do not know what that
means-
The Deputy Speaker: I ask the hon. member to refer to the
Chair.
Mr. White (Fraser Valley West): Mr. Speaker, I am sorry. I get
carried away.
I just want to go back to one other thing that is going to tell the
country whether we should elect Liberals again. How much are
they taking out of the pockets of Canadians and how much is every
one of these people getting while living off the trough of the MP
pension plan?
Mr. Robert D. Nault (Parliamentary Secretary to Minister of
Human Resources Development, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, so far we
have noticed that the member has alienated women, also Atlantic
Canadians. I am surprised he has not alienated aboriginal people.
But we did not give him enough time. Maybe we will give him the
next opportunity to talk about his party's aboriginal policy.
I would like to know exactly where he stands on aboriginal
policy since I represent 51 First Nations. I would like to know his
views on funding to First Nations.
The last thing I would like to ask the member is if he could
explain to us why we would be in favour of his particular old age
pension plan which is going to increase to individuals some 14.2
per cent, as the Minister of Finance has suggested. Could he tell me
if that is true or if Reformers have changed their position again and
maybe gone back down to some other number? We would certainly
like to know so we would know his position for the next election
campaign.
Mr. White (Fraser Valley West): Mr. Speaker, this is
interesting. The last point is wrong, so I will just dispense with that.
Where we stand on aboriginal affairs in the country is for more
accountability within the Department of Indian Affairs and
Northern Development. We certainly did not get that from this
group here.
One more thing about alienation. These members, of course, do
not understand what I was getting at. If they are doling out millions
and millions of dollars in one year to a group, why does the money
stay in the budget regardless of what group it is, year after year
after year. Why are these expenditures not going down? Why are
those expenditures staying in the same budget they always have?
What this government does not have are people who have one clue
about zero based budgeting.
They basically say if it was in the budget last year, leave it there.
There is all kinds of room in this budget to make reductions. They
only reason the Liberals are not reducing these budgets is to try to
buy votes from Canadians.
Mr. Andrew Telegdi (Waterloo, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, I must say
that in listening to that speech I find it amazing that the Reform
members have managed to attack all the interest groups in the
country. What they do not realize is that Canadians collectively are
different interest groups.
An hon. member: Talk about your MP pension plan.
Mr. Telegdi: Let me say on the public record that I will trade my
pension for the pension of the leader of the Reform Party that gets
subsidized by all sorts of goodies.
The taxpayers budget, which they cannot run from and they will
be held accountable for and which will be put to Canadians time
and time again, states that they would slash equalization payments
by 35 per cent.
(1840)
They would slash the Canada assistance plan by 34 per cent.
They would slash the aboriginal program by 24 per cent.
8427
When we you go through what they were going to do there
would have been no budget left and there would not be a Canada
left.
Mr. White (Fraser Valley West, Ref.): Mr. Speaker, meanwhile
they slash $7 billion from health but say nothing about it.
It is interesting that the member opposite says we should be
funding. They want to fund all special interest groups.
I have negotiated against the Canadian conference of teamsters
for many years. I fail to see why that interest group gets it year after
year, I believe it is $137,912.
The trouble is all this money they have taken from the Canadian
taxpayer is used in many cases to buy votes. It is not used as a zero
based budgeting concept to see how important it is to the
productivity of this nation. It is to buy votes. That is what they do
not understand about budgets.
Mr. Arseneault: Mr. Speaker, on a point of order, the hon.
member said we are using money to buy votes. First of all, that is
illegal. Second, that is not allowed in the Chamber. Mr. Speaker, I
would ask you to ask him to withdraw immediately.
The Deputy Speaker: The hon. member for Oxford on debate.
Mr. John Finlay (Oxford, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, I am sharing my
time with my colleague for Hillsborough, the Parliamentary
Secretary to Minister of Labour.
I had a prepared speech but things have been so interesting with
the last three or four speakers that I am going to leave it for a
minute. I am going back to the member for Kootenay East. My
colleague talked about Liberal-Tory, same old story.
I am going back, and it may be too far for the hon. gentleman, to
nine years of Conservative majority governments in this place.
When the Tories started in 1984 the debt was something around
$200 billion. After nine years of Michael Wilson, bless his heart,
struggling with the deficit, they never met their targets, never got
the deficit under $38 billion in a year and they more than doubled
to $500 plus billion.
That is not the story of this budget or of this government. The
deficit is now less than $19 billion. That is not the same story. The
deficit to GDP ratio has been cut in half. That is not the same story.
There is more than one way of achieving anything. We have chosen
a fairly direct way. I would suggest to the hon. member for Fraser
Valley West that this budget may well buy a few votes.
When I was on the hustings in 1993 people wanted deficit
control. The Canadian people are not stupid and they knew that if
we continued to spend more than we earned we were going to be in
a position of no return. We are going to hit the wall is the
expression. A lot of people across the way do not seem to
understand that. We do not hit the wall.
(1845)
I want to compliment the Minister of Finance. I want to
compliment the cabinet. I want to compliment all the cabinet
ministers. I want to compliment all the departments because if the
ministers and their departments had not taken seriously the
program review and had not cut their budgets we would not be in
the enviable position we find ourselves in today.
I want to compliment the members of caucus because they have
contributed to the budget and to previous budgets. They have
helped keep the Minister of Finance on course to reduce the deficit.
I also want to thank a few other people we never do thank and
one is the public servants who have not had an increase in six years.
Mr. White (Fraser Valley West): But you have on your
pension. It's indexed every darn year.
Mr. Finlay: Mr. Speaker, the member for Fraser Valley West
talks about my pension. I have not earned an MP's pension yet.
Mr. White (Fraser Valley West): Yet.
Mr. Finlay: I pay so much income tax on what I earn that I
cannot survive without my teacher's pension. Let us not worry
about that.
An hon. member: Another double dipper.
Mr. Finlay: I earned it.
Miss Grey: Take it out.
Mr. Finlay: I earned it.
Mr. Harris: Let's talk more about those pensions.
Mr. Finlay: Mr. Speaker, we need to congratulate another large
group and that is the citizens of this country who have gone along
consistently with the government and the successive budgets that
the Minister of Finance has brought forward. They are now reaping
the benefits of that support. We are now able to say: ``Here is some
money for this and here is some money for that''. We are going to
meet our goals.
Mr. Harris: Let's talk about the $10 billion payroll tax grab.
Mr. Stinson: Let's talk about you shutting down the hospitals.
Let's talk about that.
Mr. Finlay: What government, with scarce resources, shows
what its values are.
Mr. Reed: The social conscience of the Reform Party.
Mr. Finlay: Our values are jobs, health care, education and our
children.
8428
I listened much more quietly to the hon. members opposite than
they care to listen to me. However, you really have to repeat things
over and over again, don't you?
In 1998-99, for the first time in 28 years, the government will not
have to borrow any new money. We will be in the best position
among the G7 nations. The rapid turnaround of our finances has
boosted confidence in the economy. This confidence encourages
investment. It keeps interest rates low and helps to create jobs.
Employment has grown by 91,000 jobs in the last four months
alone. Private sector forecasters expect 300,000 to 350,000 new
jobs this year.
There is an old saw that says ``figures don't lie, but liars can
figure''. I am not calling anyone a liar, in case somebody rises. I
will change the saw ``figures don't lie, but politicians often fool
around with figures''.
An hon. member: Especially Reform because they cannot get it
straight.
Mr. Finlay: That is right, especially the Reform Party. My
friend from Kootenay East used figures very constructively a little
earlier. He talked about the GDP increasing 9.5 per cent and the
revenue increasing 12.5 per cent. This was some sort of sleight of
hand, some sort of disaster-
(1850 )
Mr. Abbott: It's a tax increase.
Mr. Finlay: Mr. Speaker, if our workforce were at the same level
now in 1997 as it was in 1993, unemployment would be at 6.4. per
cent, not 9.7 per cent. Revenues are up because more people are
working and more people are paying taxes. If they were not up
more than the GDP then how could we reduce the deficit? It cannot
be both ways. Revenue cannot be kept at this point and reduce the
deficit. It is not possible, and all Canadians understand that.
I am sure the hon. member for Hillsborough wants to get started
so I will cease here.
The Deputy Speaker: There is a minute and 39 seconds. The
hon. member for Beaver River.
Miss Deborah Grey (Beaver River, Ref.): Mr. Speaker, I have a
pretty simple question. I will quote the hon. member from part of
his speech. He said: ``I haven't earned my MP pension'' and we are
going to do all we can to make sure he never does, but then he said
further, ``my taxes are so high that I can't afford to live without my
teacher's pension''.
How many Canadians have the luxury of a teacher's pension to
subsidize their small wage of $64,400? If he says that his taxes are
too high-
The Deputy Speaker: The member for Oxford has the
remaining 40 seconds.
Mr. Finlay: Mr. Speaker, I have nothing to hide. I worked for 36
years in education. I have a teacher's pension. I pay taxes like every
other Canadian on the money I earn. It is considerable and I pay
considerable taxes. That is my only point.
When I say I have not earned my MP pension I mean that I have
paid for it but I have not earned it yet. I have to get elected again. It
is not granted on one term. I certainly hope that I am back here after
the next election and that some of my colleagues across the way are
not. They do not want the pension anyway.
The Deputy Speaker: It being 6.52 p.m., it is my duty to
interrupt the proceedings and put forthwith every question
necessary to dispose of the subamendment now before the House.
The question is on the amendment to the amendment.
Is it the pleasure of the House to adopt the amendment to the
amendment?
Some hon. members: Agreed.
Some hon. members: No.
The Deputy Speaker: All those in favour of the amendment to
the amendment will please say yea.
Some hon. members: Yea.
The Deputy Speaker: All those opposed will please say nay.
Some hon. members: Nay.
The Deputy Speaker: In my opinion the nays have it.
And more than five members having risen:
The Deputy Speaker: Call in the members.
(The House divided on the amendment to the amendment, which
was negatived on the following division:)
(Division No. 228)
YEAS
Members
Abbott
Bridgman
Epp
Forseth
Frazer
Grey (Beaver River)
Harris
Hermanson
Hill (Macleod)
Mayfield
McClelland (Edmonton Southwest/Sud-Ouest)
Meredith
Penson
Schmidt
Stinson
White (Fraser Valley West/Ouest)
Williams -17
NAYS
Members
Adams
Alcock
Allmand
Anawak
Arseneault
Assadourian
Augustine
Axworthy (Winnipeg South Centre/Sud-Centre)
Bachand
Bakopanos
Barnes
Beaumier
Bélanger
Bellehumeur
Bernier (Mégantic-Compton-Stanstead)
Bertrand
8429
Bevilacqua
Bodnar
Bonin
Boudria
Brien
Brown (Oakville-Milton)
Brushett
Calder
Campbell
Cannis
Catterall
Chan
Clancy
Collins
Crawford
Culbert
Cullen
Dalphond-Guiral
Daviault
Debien
DeVillers
Dhaliwal
Dion
Dromisky
Dubé
Duceppe
Duhamel
Dumas
Dupuy
Easter
English
Fewchuk
Finlay
Flis
Fontana
Fry
Gagnon (Bonaventure-Îles-de-la-Madeleine)
Gagnon (Québec)
Gallaway
Gerrard
Goodale
Graham
Harb
Harper (Churchill)
Harvard
Hopkins
Hubbard
Irwin
Jackson
Jacob
Keyes
Kilger (Stormont-Dundas)
Kirkby
Knutson
Lastewka
Laurin
Lavigne (Verdun-Saint-Paul)
Lebel
LeBlanc (Cape/Cap-Breton Highlands-Canso)
Lee
Leroux (Richmond-Wolfe)
Leroux (Shefford)
Lincoln
Loney
Loubier
MacAulay
MacDonald
MacLellan (Cape/Cap-Breton-The Sydneys)
Malhi
Maloney
Manley
Marchand
Marchi
Martin (LaSalle-Émard)
Massé
McCormick
McGuire
McKinnon
McTeague
McWhinney
Ménard
Mercier
Mifflin
Minna
Mitchell
Murphy
Murray
Nault
Nunez
O'Brien (London-Middlesex)
O'Reilly
Pagtakhan
Paradis
Parrish
Patry
Payne
Peric
Peterson
Pettigrew
Phinney
Picard (Drummond)
Pillitteri
Pomerleau
Proud
Reed
Regan
Richardson
Robichaud
Rocheleau
Scott (Fredericton-York-Sunbury)
Serré
Simmons
Speller
Steckle
Stewart (Northumberland)
Szabo
Taylor
Telegdi
Torsney
Tremblay (Rimouski-Témiscouata)
Ur
Valeri
Walker
Zed-140
PAIRED MEMBERS
Baker
Bélair
Bélisle
Bergeron
Bernier (Gaspé)
Chrétien (Frontenac)
Cohen
Collenette
Cowling
Crête
Deshaies
Discepola
Eggleton
Fillion
Gagliano
Gauthier
Gray (Windsor West/Ouest)
Grose
Guay
Kraft Sloan
Lalonde
Landry
Lavigne (Beauharnois-Salaberry)
Lefebvre
Marleau
McLellan (Edmonton Northwest/Nord-Ouest)
Robillard
Rock
Sauvageau
Stewart (Brant)
Tremblay (Lac-Saint-Jean)
Venne
(1915 )
The Deputy Speaker: I declare the subamendment defeated.
_____________________________________________
8429
ADJOURNMENT PROCEEDINGS
[
English]
A motion to adjourn the House under Standing Order 38 deemed
to have been moved.
Mr. Andy Mitchell (Parry Sound-Muskoka, Lib.): Mr.
Speaker, further to my question to the minister of agriculture, rural
Canada's concerns must be kept in the forefront and must remain a
priority for this federal government. This week's budget takes great
strides down that road.
I was very pleased to see the finance minister's emphasis on
programs and investments that will work for rural Canadians.
These budget measures will directly impact my riding of Parry
Sound-Muskoka and will help businesses in my riding to create
jobs.
(1920 )
In addition to the renewed commitment to a federal
infrastructure job creation program which has been very beneficial
in my riding, I point to the $15 million annual increase over three
years for the Canadian Tourism Commission, and the $50 million
investment in the Business Development Bank of Canada. This will
lever another $250 million in loans for the creation of tourism
infrastructure in rural areas.
I single out the $50 million investment to the Farm Credit
Corporation to be used for rural development and the $30 million
to expand the community access program to ensure that virtually
all rural communities are linked to the Internet.
This is support upon which we can build. This is support that is
right in line with what constituents across Canada were asking for
when we took testimony as part of the natural resources
committee's rural development study.
Those of us from rural areas have identified several priorities
that need to be addressed in order to enhance economic
development in the rural areas of our country. Some of these the
budget has dealt with. I am sure the constituents in rural Canada
will applaud the government's initiatives on these rural issues.
8430
The Prime Minister himself made a firm commitment to tackle
the unique needs of rural Canadians on behalf of all of us who
live in rural areas. Four ministers were charged with the rural
development portfolio and my committee has helped lead the way.
We set about detailing the challenges of rural Canada, the lack of
formal education for some of those or the lack of access to
education in high technology fields where the jobs are for others.
We looked at partnerships between the public and private sectors
to better meet the needs of business operators in rural areas so that
they would be better able to overcome the disadvantages of
distance, geography, low population densities and so that we could
enhance investment opportunities and expand our information
base.
We looked at ways to enhance the benefits of value adding in our
natural resources sector. We looked at restrictive regulatory
regimes and how they could be eliminated. We looked at how to
eliminate duplication and the need to have increased tax incentives
for investment.
Investment in innovative technologies and initiatives that will
ensure that virtually all rural communities have access to the
Internet and that build upon our efforts to date will go a long way to
giving those of us who live in rural Canada the support we need to
compete in an urban oriented world.
Further elaboration on planned or existing initiatives will help
constituents in my riding understand and therefore benefit from
federal commitments today.
Hon. Fernand Robichaud (Secretary of State (Agriculture
and Agri-Food, Fisheries and Oceans), Lib.): Mr. Speaker, since
the speech from the throne and the commitment to rural economic
renewal, federal departments have been working together to focus
efforts.
A great variety of programs and services currently can assist
rural development, yet these are not widely known. The first step
has been to ensure that rural Canadians are made aware of what is
already available. Communications activities are under way to
provide concrete details of programs and service information to
rural Canadians.
Among the many programs, the Canadian adaptation and rural
development fund, noted in the House on February 6, is putting
more than $100 million over the next four years into the hands of
local adaptation councils across Canada.
A further $50 million capital infusion to the FCC announced in
the budget will assist growth and diversification in the farm sector.
The government is also pursuing further opportunities to improve
the range of financial products and services available to rural
Canadians.
The community access program is helping rural and remote
communities access the information highway. In January a further
429 projects were funded, making a total of over 700 rural
communities across Canada now being assisted.
[Translation]
In the 1996 budget speech, the government provided for a fund
to assist 1,500 communities by 1998. In this year's budget, it sets
aside another $30 million over the next three years to help some
5,000 rural communities gain access to the Internet. These
community access points-
The Deputy Speaker: I am sorry, but time is up.
(1925)
[English]
Mr. Pat O'Brien (London-Middlesex, Lib.): Mr. Speaker,
one week ago, on February 13, I had the opportunity in the House
to ask the Minister of Public Works and Government Services a
question on the issue of co-op housing in Canada.
The question flowed from a number of concerns that have been
brought to my attention as the member of Parliament for
London-Middlesex.
Before directing these comments to my colleague, the
parliamentary secretary, I would like to refresh members' minds
because I think they all have had representations made to them that
there are three primary concerns of people who live in co-op
housing now.
First is the maintenance of national standards. Quite frankly,
people in Ontario have a very real concern that where there is a
right wing slashing type of government in power, as they feel the
current government is, such a government cannot be relied on
without definitive national standards to protect co-op housing as it
currently exists.
They have a very real fear that the government will put it on
chopping block one way or another, either by passing it on to the
municipalities or simply by refusing to protect current
arrangements.
Second is the whole issue of the protection of current agreements
which exist for people living in co-op housing, particularly the
protection of current mortgage agreements.
Third is the necessity for full public consultation between the
federal government, the people who live in co-op housing and their
spokespeople across the country.
A option has been put forward by these people that they would
like the opportunity to run co-op housing themselves in
co-operation with the federal government, which they have much
more trust in, as was expressed to me, than they have in certain
provincial governments in the country.
8431
I wonder if the parliamentary secretary could elaborate on the
assurances that the minister gave me. I will quote part of her
answer very briefly: ``As a condition, before provinces get to sign
an agreement, they will have to agree to respect national
principles''.
My question on that point to the parliamentary secretary is how
would we insist that these national principles be enforced. If
governments refused to live up to them, what then would be the
course of the federal government?
The minister went on to say: ``More important, they will have to
adhere to a strict accountability framework in order to ensure that
those dollars continue to be spent to help those in need of
housing''.
I wonder if the parliamentary secretary might elaborate on
exactly what strict accountability the minister had in mind when
she gave that answer.
Mr. John Harvard (Parliamentary Secretary to Minister of
Public Works and Government Services, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, I
am pleased to respond further to the question raised by my
colleague regarding the important negotiations between the federal
government and the provinces concerning housing.
The federal government has offered to the provinces and
territories the opportunity to take over the management of the
existing federal social housing resources, with the exception of
housing on Indian reserves, provided federal subsidies continue to
be used for housing and are targeted to low income households.
These negotiations are aimed at simplifying the administration
of social housing by eliminating overlap and duplication and
providing clients with one stop shopping.
Let me assure my colleague that national principles and a
rigorous accountability framework will govern the agreement and
provinces will have to agree and respect those agreements. Once
new social housing agreements are in place, any future cost savings
that may be realized will be used for social housing purposes,
either to assist in the management and/or renovation of the older
existing social housing portfolio or to create new social housing
programs.
The federal government is not withdrawing the financial support
it provides to low income Canadians with housing needs. We will
continue to meet our financial obligations related to the existing
social housing portfolio currently at about $1.9 billion a year.
With regard to the protection of existing rights of people living
in co-operative housing, let me further assure my colleague that
since individual sponsors own and operate most of the federally
assisted non-profit and co-operative housing, CMHC agreements
with individual co-operatives will continue to be legally binding. I
can assure my hon. colleague of that.
[Translation]
The Deputy Speaker: Dear colleagues, the motion to adjourn
the House is deemed to have been adopted. The House stands
adjourned until 10 a.m. tomorrow.
(The House adjourned at 7.30 p.m.)