:
Thank you very much, Mr. Chairman.
For clarity, Nick Leswick is assistant deputy minister, economic and fiscal policy, and he's really good at his job too.
[Translation]
I want to thank you, Mr. Chair, and I want to say that I'm pleased to be here today to speak to the distinguished members of the Standing Committee on Finance about Bill and the investments that our government will make to strengthen the middle class and keep Canada's economy strong and growing for the long term.
[English]
The measures in the budget implementation bill will enable us to move forward on our ambitious economic agenda, designed to strengthen the middle class and ensure long-term growth by making smart, necessary investments in our country's future. It's a plan I was honoured to table in the House through our very first budget on March 22. Since that day, I have been telling Canada's story from coast to coast as well as in the United States, Europe, and most recently at the G7 finance ministers' meeting in Sendai, Japan.
Meetings like this one are a great opportunity to demonstrate Canada's leadership on important international issues and to send the message that Canada is back, that we're engaged, and that we're a global leader. In Japan, at the G20, at the IMF spring meetings on Wall Street, as elsewhere over the last two months, people kept telling me the same thing: “We really like what you're doing in Canada.”
Members may have read that the Financial Times called Canada a “glimmer of light”.The Wall Street Journal called Canada the poster child for the International Monetary Fund's global growth strategy. Christine Lagarde, head of the IMF, praised our approach.
Our budget earned these endorsements because, I firmly believe, our government is focused on exactly the right things, and it has answered the call of millions of Canadians, who have told us both before the budget and after that they want real change.
Even before the budget, our government set to work to create the conditions that help middle-class Canadians and their families. On December 7, 2015, we took a significant first step to strengthen the middle class by cutting taxes for nearly nine million Canadians.
In addition to the tax cut, we introduced the new Canada child benefit in budget 2016. This benefit is intended to help parents better support their most precious resource, their children.
The Canada child benefit is a simpler, more generous tax-free benefit for Canadians. It's also better targeted to those who need it most than the previously existing child benefits were.
It's estimated that about 300,000 fewer children will be living in poverty in the 2016-17 fiscal year compared with the 2014-15 fiscal year, once the Canada child benefit is in place. This means that families will have extra funds to help them afford cleats for their kids playing soccer or to attend summer camp. It means the increased likelihood of the numerous little things that make summer in childhood the carefree, refreshing time that it's meant to be.
This is a tangible measure that gives families across this country options, options they may not have had before. It represents the most significant social policy in a generation.
But this isn't the only significant social policy within the pages of this budget implementation bill. Equally important are those that help our most vulnerable citizens find renewed support for the unique challenges they may face.
There are three broad areas in this bill that reflect our actions in this regard.
The first is seniors.
Canada's retirement income system has been successful at reducing the incidence of poverty among Canadian seniors; however, some seniors continue to be at a heightened risk of living in a low-income situation.
[Translation]
The budget will help Canadians retire with security and dignity by making significant new investments that support them throughout their retirement years. These include resetting the age of eligibility for old age security and guaranteed income supplement benefits to 65 from 67, and for allowance benefits to 60 from 62 over the 2023 to 2029 period.
The passage of the bill will also increase the guaranteed income supplement top-up benefit by up to $947 annually for the most vulnerable single seniors, starting in July 2016.
The second area deals with Canadians who've fallen on hard times because of a loss of employment.
[English]
This bill proposes immediate action to enhance the employment insurance program so that out-of-work Canadians have the support they need while they look for their next job.
I'd particularly like to highlight that passage of the bill will extend EI regular benefits by five weeks to all eligible claimants in regions of the country that have experienced the sharpest and most severe increases in unemployment. We'll also extend employment insurance regular benefits by up to an additional 20 weeks for long-tenured workers in those regions.
I'd like to highlight another area where we'll provide much-needed support: veterans. We'll give back to those who've given so much in service to our country. Some $1.6 billion over five years will flow directly to veterans and their families in the form of higher direct payments. These enhancements deliver on mandate commitments and respond to recommendations from key stakeholders, including the veterans ombudsman.
Budget 2016 is about supporting the middle class now through helping Canadian families. It will continue to do so in the future by laying the foundation for long-term economic growth.
Canada's population is aging. The global economy is volatile. Oil prices are, of course, unpredictable. We need to take steps to improve competitiveness and productivity in Canada so we become drivers of our own success now and in a generation from now.
We need to ensure that the steps we take now will help our kids and our grandkids. The budget signals a number of areas known to do just that. The largest are in the important areas of infrastructure and innovation. Our $120-billion ten-year infrastructure plan and our innovation agenda will be articulated over the coming year. Once in place, they'll deliver a long-term boost to the Canadian economy. They'll create good jobs now and in the future.
Investments in public transit will also help mom and dad to get to work on time. Investments in green infrastructure will help to keep our water clean, and investments in housing will help entire communities to thrive. Investments in and a commitment to a more innovative economy mean jobs after graduation, a cleaner resource sector, and a strong Canadian presence for the world stage.
Infrastructure and innovation are just part of the underlying objective of the 2016 budget. This objective is the development of a robust growth strategy to create the conditions for long-term sustained and inclusive growth for the middle class and those working hard to join it.
This is a multi-dimensional task, one that brings together a number of growth-related initiatives going on inside and outside government. It's also a team effort. I'm proud to be working with my cabinet colleagues, including Ministers Freeland, Bains, Sohi, and Mihychuk on delivering this agenda.
We know we don't have all the answers. We're open to innovative new ideas. As we look to a long-term growth strategy, we know we have to find ways to do things differently.
[Translation]
Just a few weeks ago, I hosted the inaugural meeting of the new advisory council on economic growth to advise the government on key elements of our strategy. It was the first step toward figuring out what Canada will need to create and sustain long-term economic growth that benefits the middle class and those working hard to join it.
[English]
That's why this council has been tasked with finding solutions to some of our biggest challenges, things like how to transform innovative ideas into high-value goods and services that will help Canadians and Canadian businesses, how to ensure that the historic investments in infrastructure make it easier for Canadians to get to work on time or get their products to market, and what can be done today so Canadians can take advantage of the job opportunities of tomorrow.
I expect that budget 2017 will become the blueprint for this next chapter of Canada's economic growth and another step toward ensuring that when you have an economy that works for the middle class, you have a country that works for everyone. By working together, we can ensure all Canadians continue to enjoy a high and rising standard of living.
Mr. Chairman, it's been a highlight and honour to be able to promote our government's vision. I know we all believe that Canada is a place of opportunities where people can dream of a future in which their children can thrive and succeed. Through our budget, we're making investments that will leave Canada, our middle class, our cities, and our economy better off. We promised real change. We owe it to Canadians to make it happen.
Mr. Chair, I look forward to working with members of this committee, Parliament, and all Canadians as we implement our plan and position Canada for a brighter future.
Thank you.
:
Thank you for the question.
Let me start by saying the Canada child benefit is intended to help families, and it does exactly that. For nine out of 10 Canadian families with children, it's going to put them in a better situation. For families that are single families with children, it will put them in a better situation.
As a starting point, we're actually providing more money for families. The examples that we often use are, first of all, on average, those nine out of 10 families will have $2,300 more, and a woman earning $30,000 who has one child under six will get $6,400 more. Getting more money, in our estimation, is a very positive thing for families that are struggling to raise their children.
The more direct way to answer your question is that the design of the Canada child benefit is exactly the same as the Canada child tax benefit that it's replacing. There is really no change in this regard. Given that there's no change, we don't believe this is an area of significant discussion. It will not be included in income and will not affect child support payments for divorced parents. We want that to be clear to Canadians who are trying to evaluate their new-found and better situation, because we recognize that this is of importance to them. This will be a benefit that will be significantly better for, as I said, a very large percentage of Canadians, and we're very pleased with this change.
:
Let me start by saying that I think it's important to be responsible when we sit in the House and we talk to Canadians. I want to again make sure Canadians understand, with respect to the Canada child benefit, that it will not be included in income and will not affect child support payments for divorced parents. The program is better for Canadian families. It helps those families that actually need money to raise their children.
I was proud to represent Canada at the G7, and I can say to you that at the G7 meeting we had an open and frank discussion among the countries there. There was not consensus there, but there was unanimity on the fact that we should all be focusing on growth.
The challenges to growth of the global economy are significant. We've seen a decline in the opportunities in some of the emerging economies around the world. We've seen a greater level of volatility in growth.
We all agreed that in each country's specific situation they should take whatever measures are most appropriate. We identified three different areas that countries might want to focus on: structural reform efforts, monetary policy, and fiscal policy. We recognized that different countries are in different positions from which to take those different measures.
Canada, as it turns out—happily, for our country—is in the best net debt-to-GDP position of all G7 countries, so we are in the best position to make fiscal investments. As you probably know, back in the 1990s our net debt-to-GDP ratio was reduced dramatically under the Chrétien and Martin governments. That puts us in a position where we can make those kinds of investments.
I will tell you that the kinds of investments we're making, which are fiscal investments, are appropriate for us, and I know the members around the G7 table would understand that those are the kinds of things we should be doing with our fiscal position. They are, by the way, similar to what's being done in six out of the seven G7 countries.
:
Since part of it was in English, I'll take the liberty of answering in English.
We think the measures were appropriate. We have parts of the country that are experiencing sharp and sustained changes in their situations. The regions we've chosen are the ones that have had the most significant changes in unemployment. At the same time, we recognize that employment insurance is helpful for many other parts of the country, and that's why we've made some changes to allow people to get into the system more rapidly.
I think, as you know, we've also made some changes in the amount of money we're putting in for training so that people, once they get into the system, can also get more access to training dollars.
We think these are the right measures to take at a time when we're experiencing regional differences in our economic situations, with some regions experiencing positive situations; and some regions, as a result of, largely, but not exclusively, changes in the price of oil, experiencing difficult situations. Our view is that we've made significant differences by taking these approaches.
There are other things we're doing that I would encourage you to consider. Lowering taxes for Canadians and adding the Canada child benefit will make a very big increase, especially for those who are the least well off in our society, and it will have a measurable impact on their ability to cope at this time.
Finally, and not least, we hope and expect the investments we're making will allow us to have a more effective long-term growth rate, which will help people in the future.
Maybe I can spend a minute focusing on our innovation agenda, because as we think about what we need to do in the long term in order to be more effective, it will be about creating a more productive and effective economy.
As I mentioned, we put $800 million in the budget over four years to focus on innovation. As you know, I appointed an economic advisory council to look at how we can focus on growth. That will be an important cornerstone of what we hope to achieve for the future of our country.
We started in the budget with a focus on research and universities. We know that putting $2 billion against universities and specifically around innovation and research at universities will help them to tool up and build the capacity to help with research and innovation.
We also recognize that the only way we're going to be effective as a more innovative economy is if we have quality students coming out of our universities. We recognize that for many families, especially low-income and middle-income families, university tuition is a challenge, so we changed the university grants system so they would have a much improved situation. It was moved from $2,000 to $3,000 for the lowest-income Canadians, which will help a quarter of a million low-income Canadians.
Along with building blocks, helping students, and supporting universities in research, we are now looking at what we can do around our innovation agenda in terms of the enablers for networks and clusters. We are considering whether there are measures we can take that will enable us to be more effective, and we are also specifically considering whether we should be targeting how we create the opportunities in regions and in sectors to make a difference. That's what I'm working on with our advisory council. We are looking forward to making a good, long-term difference for the country.
:
It's important to not be too dramatic on this subject. We've had a good situation in helping seniors over the last generation in retirement in Canada. If we go back to the 1960s, the situation for seniors in this country was very difficult. We had very high levels of poverty for women, over 60%, and for men it was over 50% levels of poverty, so it was a very difficult situation.
The actions taken at that time around the guaranteed income supplement, old age security, and the Canada pension plan made a difference. They made a real difference so that Canada now has a much lower level of senior poverty. The actions worked. Taking action in advance by putting those programs in place had a long-term impact that made a real difference.
That's where we find ourselves today. We're looking at the situation that we're in, with a continuing level of senior poverty that's not nearly as high—it's more like in the 6% or 7% zone—but it's one that could get more troubling in the future, for two reasons. First of all, there's lower pension plan coverage; second, people are living longer, so they actually have to make the amount that they have stretch out longer. In that situation we want to make sure that we take actions today that are going to help people over the long term.
We're very focused not only on the current situation but also on the future situation. The decisions we make today, I think, will leave a legacy for our children and our grandchildren and ensure that they find themselves in a better situation when they retire than they might be in otherwise. It's for that reason that I'm personally committed, and our government's committed, to enhancing the Canada pension plan in a fully funded way that will enable people to have a more secure retirement in the long term.
That, I think, is the responsible thing for us to do. It will mean that the people who are doing well today can feel that the next generation will be in as good a situation as they are in today. These measures will allow us to continue to work on reducing seniors' poverty over the next few years and also in the long term.
:
Thanks for the question.
This is an important issue. I would say that the very first way we are going to help students to manage the debt is by helping them not to have as much.
I do have to go back to the student grants. I think pretty well every student would rather have less debt, so by increasing the grants for low-income, middle-income, and part-time students, we will make a material impact on the actual amount of debt they have when they graduate from school. That is step number one.
Step number two is that we are creating a significantly larger number of summer jobs for students. First, you have a higher grant; second, you provide more jobs. Our summer job program will increase the number of jobs for students by 300,000. That will give them more opportunity to earn money during their summers so that they will be able to pay off a portion of their debt.
Those are step one and step two. Step three is to enable them not to have to pay their debt until they get to a reasonable amount of income. We have allowed for up to $25,000. Until students earn $25,000, they won't have to begin paying the debt. That allows them a time period until they get their first job or their first serious long-term employment when they are not burdened with that debt. That will help them to get going.
All of these things, I think, are important measures for students. Of course, investing in universities and innovation is going to enable them to gain the skills and find the kinds of jobs that will make a real difference for them in the long term, so that they will be able to afford to pay off their debt when they get into the workforce.
The bill proposes to make three essential changes to the Employment Insurance Act. The first of these is to extend extra weeks of benefits for workers in regions affected by the downturn in commodity prices, the second is to eliminate new entrant and re-entrant provisions, and the third is to change the two-week waiting period to one week.
I'll speak to these briefly in turn and then take questions.
On the extension of extra benefits, the EI program provides temporary financial assistance to unemployed workers who have lost their jobs through no fault of their own while they look for employment or upgrade their skills. Dramatic declines in global commodity prices since late 2014 have produced sharp and sustained unemployment shocks in commodity-based regions. Budget 2016 provides that eligible unemployed workers in 12 regions hardest hit by the downturn in commodity prices may receive additional weeks of EI regular benefits. Five additional weeks of EI regular benefits will be available for all eligible unemployed workers in specified regions, up to a maximum of 50 weeks, and up to an additional 20 weeks will be available to eligible unemployed long-tenured workers in specified regions, up to a maximum of 70 weeks. Extended benefits will be available for a period of one year starting in July 2016, with the measure applying to all eligible claimants as of January 4, 2015.
That's the first measure, Mr. Chair.
I'll speak next to the second measure, the elimination of new entrants and re-entrants.
The government is seeking to make amendments to the EI Act and to amend the EI regulations and EI fishing regulations to eliminate the new entrant and re-entrant requirements established for regular claimants and self-employed fishers.
Currently new entrant and re-entrant rules require workers newly entering the labour force or re-entering after an absence of two years to accumulate 910 hours of insurable employment in the year preceding their claim to be eligible for employment insurance benefits. The proposed amendments will eliminate the new entrant and re-entrant provisions introduced in 1978 and instead will require claimants to meet their regional variable entrance requirement, which varies between 420 hours and 700 hours, to be eligible for EI regular benefits.
Self-employed fishers will need to reach the regional insurable earnings entrance requirements for fishers, which varies from $2,500 to $4,200 to qualify for fishing benefits.
The provisions will also allow workers to gain access to EI-funded training supports delivered through labour market development agreements with provinces and territories, as these workers must qualify for Part I benefits before qualifying for Part II benefits.
Turning to the third measure, Mr. Chair, the Employment Insurance Act currently requires claimants to serve a waiting period prior to benefits being payable and provides that it may be deferred or waived in specific circumstances.
The waiting period has been set at two weeks since 1971. These amendments to the EI Act will reduce the waiting period from two weeks to one week. All claimants whose benefit period commences before the coming into force of these amendments will be subject to the existing two-week waiting period.
:
Thank you for the question.
The definition of long-tenured workers, just to start there, is someone who has contributed at least 30% of the maximum employee contributions into the program in seven of the last 10 years and has not drawn more than 35 weeks of EI regular benefits in the last five years. This is a definition that was put in place during the 2009 recession and the extraordinary measures that followed.
The intent of it has a number of antecedents, if I can put it that way. To go back to the work that we had been doing in terms of monitoring the increase in claims that we saw and analyzing the background of the people who were exhausting their benefits, what we saw was that a preponderance of these people were long-tenured workers who were aged 45 years and older and had essentially the highest benefit rate amounts in their weekly cheque.
In terms of past work that we've done and the wider research on that particular age group, there's a wide body of work, particularly in Canada, to the effect that for those workers starting at age 45, if they experience a job loss, alarming proportions of them do not work again, essentially, until they can access a pension income. I'd point to David Gray and Ross Finnie at the University of Ottawa, who have done quite good work on this front.
The claims analysis that we were doing, coupled with the wider research of the difficulties that this group in particular can face in reattaching to the labour market, were considerable reasons for continuing the extension that was granted during the recession. I think there are other considerations, such as the degree to which they have also contributed to the program without drawing on it in the past.
In the budget the government committed to ensure that government institutions are aligned to best support infrastructure innovation by transferring responsibility for PPP Canada to the Minister of Infrastructure and Communities. Currently PPP Canada is a subsidiary of the Canada Development Investment Corporation, which is a parent crown corporation in the finance portfolio.
Created in 2008 by OIC and incorporated under the Canada Business Corporations Act, PPP Canada is a small organization whose mandate relates to two things: first, providing advice on P3 opportunities to the federal government and to others, and second, managing the PPP fund on behalf of the federal government.
Division 14 of the budget legislation provides for two things to effect the transfer of PPP Canada from the Minister of Finance to the Minister of Infrastructure and Communities. First, as required under the FAA, it allows the shares of PPP Canada to be transferred to the Minister of Infrastructure. Second, as is currently the case, the legislation preserves the government's oversight of PPP Canada by authorizing the Governor in Council to amend key business characteristics, such as mandate and business restrictions, the selling or disposal of shares or assets, amalgamation or dissolution of the corporation, and its agency status in the future.
As it is a parent crown, there needs to be an act of Parliament to do these things. Previously or currently, when it was a subsidiary, they could be done by OIC.
That's a brief overview of the legislation.