:
I call this meeting to order.
Welcome to meeting number 46 of the House of Commons Standing Committee on Finance.
Pursuant to the order of reference of May 10, 2022, the committee is meeting on Bill .
Today's meeting is taking place in a hybrid format, pursuant to the House order of November 25, 2021. Members are attending in person in the room and remotely by using the Zoom application. Per the directive of the Board of Internal Economy on March 10, 2022, all those attending the meeting in person must wear a mask, except for members who are at their place during proceedings.
I'd like to make a few comments for the benefit of the witnesses and members. Please wait until I recognize you by name before speaking. For those participating by video conference, click on the microphone icon to activate your mike. Please mute yourself when you're not speaking. For interpretation for those on Zoom, you have the choice at the bottom of your screen of either “floor”, “English” or “French”. For those in the room, you can use the earpiece and select the desired channel. All comments should be addressed through the chair.
For members in the room, if you wish to speak, please raise your hand. For members on Zoom, please use the “raise hand” function. The clerk and I will manage the speaking order as best we can. We appreciate your patience and understanding in this regard. I request that members and witnesses treat each other with mutual respect and decorum.
I would now like to welcome today's witnesses. From the Coalition of Canadian Independent Craft Brewers, we have Brad Goddard. From Boating BC Association, we have Bruce Hayne, executive director. From Campaign 2000, we have Leila Sarangi, national director. From the Fédération québécoise des municipalités, we have Jacques Demers, president, and David Boulet, an economist with the policy section.
We will now begin with Mr. Goddard from the Coalition of Canadian Independent Craft Brewers for his opening remarks.
Mr. Goddard, you have up to five minutes.
:
Thank you for having me present to the committee today.
My name is Brad Goddard. I am the chair of the Coalition of Canadian Independent Craft Brewers, an organization representing 16 of Canada’s leading independent craft brewers.
In 2021, under the advice of the government, our group undertook to engage MNP, a large national accounting firm, to conduct the first-ever economic impact study of our unique manufacturing sector. Knowing that we couldn’t get a full picture of the state of craft brewing in Canada by polling just our small membership, we were able to align our interests with the Canadian Craft Brewers Association, a relatively new national trade association representing Canada’s 1,200 craft brewers from coast to coast to coast. We were able to agree on the definition of “craft” for the study, which was no mean feat. For the purposes of this joint study, we defined craft as Canadian-owned, independent and producing less than one million hectolitres per year. A hectolitre is 100 litres.
Our study was able to show that craft brewing creates jobs—in fact, some 17,340 jobs, not to be too specific—across Canadian communities, both big and small. In terms of direct employment, Canadian craft brewing represents 96% of the brewing industry’s total employment. Our operations are what we call, rather romantically, “beautifully inefficient”. It takes a lot of people to make our beers. We do it without the global procurement advantages or scale that Canada’s largest brewers have. This means that our sector not only hires local; we also buy local inputs, use local logistics companies and stimulate the economies right outside our front door.
Our community of brewers is telling us that there are major barriers not just to growth but also to survival right now. Our study told us that most craft breweries producing less than 10,000 hectolitres a year, which is most craft breweries, are not profitable. If these entrepreneurs can survive until they reach 20,000 hectolitres, the majority of them will then become profitable. Now mash in runaway inflation and the bubbles in our beer quickly start to disappear. Our research tells us that malt prices, the backbone of our product, have increased between 20% and 50% this year; aluminum by 15% to 20%; and fuel surcharges, which is how our materials get to us and our beers go off and find their consumers, by 75% to 100%.
The answer for managing these costs would typically be to raise prices, but what we see in Canada is that beer, our national beverage, the affordable luxury during tough times, is relatively inelastic in terms of pricing. Our customers and our consumers are getting squeezed to such a degree that they’re drawing the line on beer and saying they cannot afford price increases. Beer Canada’s most recent statistics show a sustained decline in the volume of beer sold, with people drinking less beer, flat beer prices and Canadians refusing to pay more.
We’re a sector in rapid growth and we're tight on free cash. What little cash we have is just barely covering our rapidly increasing costs. Our study did look at options to help our sector not only survive but thrive. The answer is to modernize beer excise schedules. Beer excise has been untouched since the government made adjustments in 2006. The reduced rates that went into effect on Canada Day of that year supported a brewing industry poised for growth. At that time there were 88 craft breweries, and growth was capped at 75,000 hectolitres. Fast-forward to today, and that number has grown over 1,000% to 1,200 craft breweries, with much of that growth happening over the last seven years.
So what’s our bright idea? Eliminate excise on beer volumes under 10,000 hectolitres and then use a progressive tax structure as independent brewers invest and scale their businesses to a new volume cap of one million hectolitres. I realize that growing the excise cap from 75,000 hectolitres to one million hectolitres feels like a big jump, but some of Canada’s largest craft brewing markets, such as British Columbia, Alberta and Saskatchewan, defined craft brewing at 400,000 hectolitres. That spurred a renaissance of rural brewers setting up shop in small communities across those provinces.
To take some more sticker shock away, MNP’s work on our revised excise schedule shows a meagre net reduction in tax revenue for the Government of Canada of $4 million. The more craft brewing grows, the more people we hire, the more we spend and the better off Canadian communities are.
I know that this committee has heard from sectors that are contemplating paying excise for the first time. Our industry has done a lot of the heavy lifting when it comes to excise, and now we need the government to choose to invest in our sector to help us grow through these challenging times.
Thank you.
:
Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
Thank you to the committee for allowing us to present today. I don't think I will take the full five minutes to do the introduction, but I would like to frame some of my remarks for discussion later.
My name is Bruce Hayne. I am the executive director of the Boating BC Association, which represents over 300 recreational marine businesses in the province of British Columbia. While I don't speak for all of my counterparts across Canada, we're certainly united on many of the discussion points today.
Just to frame it a bit, B.C. accounts for 25% of the recreational boating industry in Canada. We have revenues of over $2.5 billion in the province each year. Recreational boating represents over 20,000 jobs in our province of British Columbia.
First and foremost, we're opposed to the recreational tax on recreational boats in excess of $250,000. It has been two years since we've been discussing this on Parliament Hill. We came here a little over two years ago in a blizzard in January. At the time, we felt that the 10% luxury tax was the worst thing that could possibly happen to our sector.
Little did we know that six or seven weeks later we would be hit by the pandemic. Since that time, as an example, our association has not been able to hold the Vancouver International Boat Show, which sees 30,000 people come through the doors of BC Place each year. That represents over 70% of the revenue to our association.
Fundamentally, as I've said, we are opposed to the tax. It has not worked anywhere in the world where it's been tried, whether that's in Spain, in Italy, in New Zealand or in Southeast Asia. Recreational taxes on boats have been a dismal failure, and they've been repealed everywhere in the world where they've been tried.
This tax was meant to ask the wealthy to pay a little bit more. While that's a terrific sound bite and on the face of it seems like a logical argument, what it does is actually hurt middle-class jobs. It hurts jobs in manufacturing and in dealers and brokers. It hurt jobs in marinas where boats are stored, in repair shops and in the hospitality industry. On the manufacturing, as an example, just in B.C. we have several large manufacturers in this province that are going to have to scale back. One of the manufacturers has in fact pulled out of its manufacturing in Canada and is now moving to the States.
Also, this tax is fundamentally unfair. For instance, there is no proposed luxury tax on luxury motor homes, as an example, but there is on recreational boats. We simply don't understand why this tax is targeted to a specific industry.
Next is the blue economy. The government has stated that the blue economy—in other words, the economy of the oceans, both on the east coast and the west coast—is going to play a fundamental role in our economic recovery from COVID-19. This tax quite frankly flies in the face of that statement.
There are so many people who simply cannot afford vacation property or waterfront property in B.C. or anywhere across Canada. For many folks and for many families, a recreational boat is their waterfront property. They get to spend time with their family on the water each and every weekend, and that is their vacation home.
Many people, of course, think that a $250,000 boat may be a luxury yacht. It simply isn't. A $250,000 boat is a sport boat. It's a fishing boat that dad and son can go out in and that the family can go out in on the weekend and enjoy. These are the recreational opportunities that so many families are looking for.
We realize that the government is determined to implement this tax, and we've been fighting it, as I've said, for over two years. Fundamentally, we're opposed to it. However, we understand that in all likelihood this tax is going to be implemented, so we're going to ask for four things if and when this tax is implemented.
The first is an exemption from tax for all deals signed before the legislation comes into effect, regardless of delivery date.
Currently, retail deliveries completed and registered before September 1, 2022, and contracts completed before December 31, 2021, would be exempt, but our supply chain disruptions mean that many of these vessels are not going to appear in Canada for the next two years. We're asking for an exemption from the tax for any legitimate deal that is pending prior to the implementation.
The second thing that we're asking for is to tax the net price of the vessel, not the gross price, which is, quite frankly, the way that cars and boats are sold now. If you buy a $50,000 car and you have a $20,000 trade-in, your GST or HST is obviously on the net $30,000. That's not the way that this tax is proposed to be implemented.
Third, we would like to provide an exemption for businesses that are purchasing vessels for rental. Currently the way the legislation is written, any recreational vessel with a berth—in other words, with a bed—would have the tax applied. That means that houseboats, for example, on the Shuswap in the interior of British Columbia, or fishing charters and so on with berths in them would be required to pay the tax. We simply don't see that as being fair.
Finally, we'd like to exclude the luxury tax from the HST, or the GST in the case of British Columbia. As written, it would be on top of the luxury tax final price, so it would be a tax on tax. We're asking that there not be a tax on tax.
With that, I've gone over my time.
Thank you very much.
:
Hello. Thank you very much for inviting me to appear today to speak to Bill .
My name is Leila Sarangi and I'm the national director of Campaign 2000, which is a coalition of over 120 organizations working to end child and family poverty.
Today, more than one in six children in Canada lives in poverty. There are measures in budget 2022 that are extremely important for these children and families: dental care for children, starting this year, and new investments in Jordan's principle to advance equitable access to services for first nations children. Infrastructure investment in housing and child care, if designed well and targeted, would also eventually help low-income children and families, but that is still years away. Today, low-income and marginalized families continue to struggle with poverty and the ongoing effects of the pandemic.
We know this budget wants to turn the page on income supports to individuals. This is where I'm going to focus my comments today, because it's so crucial to the families I'm representing.
On May 7, just over a week ago, all pandemic-related income benefits to individuals expired. This included the lockdown benefit, the sickness benefit and the caregiving benefit. Temporary EI eligibility requirements are set to expire on September 25 of this year, and promised permanent reform is not allocated in this budget. We have not yet turned the page on the virus and it is still out there making people sick, but now there are no income supports for people who need to isolate or care for family.
Further, budget 2022 does not deal with the punitive clawbacks to income benefits experienced by low- and moderate-income families. These clawbacks started almost immediately for people who received social and disability assistance. Taxes filed last year triggered further clawbacks on GIS and Canada child benefit payments, as well as to a range of provincial and territorial benefits. In July of this year, we expect yet another round of clawbacks to refundable tax credits, including additional clawbacks to the Canada child benefit, a program that we know is crucial to lifting children out of poverty.
I want to be really clear on this point: These clawbacks are detrimental and punitive. From the outset of the pandemic, we have been collecting stories about how income benefits help low-income earners meet their basic needs. People shopped locally and buoyed local economies with their purchases. We have been collecting stories about the shock of these clawbacks, which were not expected. These families do not have the financial resiliency to deal with unforeseen reductions, or even foreseen reductions, to their monthly budgets—budgets that have to account for every nickel and dime, because there is so little money, especially right now with rising inflation and the rising cost of living.
Now the government is seeking CERB and CRB repayments. Letters have been sent out by Service Canada and the CRA. Maternity benefits are already being garnisheed by 50% for new mothers. We understand that flexible payment plans are being offered on an individual basis, which is a nice gesture, but even a $25 monthly repayment plan means that families will skip a meal, medication or Internet bill payment to make that payment.
Clawbacks to GIS for low-income seniors have been reversed, repayment relief has been given to the self-employed and partial relief has been provided to students. Our recommendation today is to provide what we have been calling a “full CERB amnesty”. This includes immediately ceasing pursuit of people living on low or moderate incomes for repayments of CERB and CRB; legislating the reinstatement of pandemic income benefits at the full $500 weekly amount until employment insurance is reformed; refunding all lost benefit amounts related to CERB and CRB receipt; and ensuring social and disability assistance adequacy through increased investments in the Canada social transfer, tied to adequacy standards and accountability mechanisms.
Thank you for your time today. I look forward to answering any questions.
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Good morning, everyone.
I am very proud to be here today to discuss the federal budget with you.
My name is Jacques Demers, and I am the mayor of Sainte-Catherine-de-Hatley, the prefect of the Regional County Municipality, or RCM, of Memphrémagog and president of the Fédération québécoise des municipalités, or FQM.
I am accompanied by David Boulet, FQM's economic adviser. I will be sharing my speaking time with him.
I will start by briefly explaining what the federation is.
FQM, which has 1,025 member Quebec municipalities, is the municipal organization that represents the most municipalities across the province. FQM represents the regions, territories and the rural world. A great deal of economic development takes place in the RCMs.
What we want to do today is show you the impact the budget has on investment in our structures. Quebec has recently taken major steps and will be taking more over the next few months, particularly with regard to Internet access. It will also have to examine the cellular network. We will have to invest in a great deal of important infrastructure, such as roads and dams.
I will now turn the floor over to Mr. Boulet, who will provide you with more technical details.
Good afternoon, members of the committee.
The rural world definitely has its particular features. Every one of Quebec's regions is unique. Investment needs are different in the regions, and public policies must be adjusted accordingly.
We often see underinvestment in regional infrastructure and services, and it always seems more difficult to convince governments to invest in sectors with low-density populations. Today we will try to show you how important investment in infrastructure or climate change mitigation, for example, actually is.
The federal budget includes some positive measures for Quebec's regions. In housing, for example, the announcement of a more than $11 billion investment in affordable housing is good news for development in the regions. All the initiatives designed to increase the number of housing units are worth highlighting. However, the implementation of those measures will still entail many challenges. A cohesive relationship between the federal and provincial governments will be essential to the success of that rollout.
Housing has become a critical problem in the past few years, and it's no longer limited to the cities and urbanized areas. Quebec's regions face housing challenges. The task is no longer merely to provide social or affordable house, but also to house workers and newcomers. This is even more important in the context of the present labour shortage. The housing shortage also prevents certain regions from taking full advantage of the current interest in Quebec's regions, which rose during the COVID‑19 pandemic and has been accelerating since it began.
The federal budget also includes new funding for regional economic development. A total of $1.5 billion is earmarked for development agencies to support the economic recovery. We welcome that initiative.
Now I want to discuss FQM's priorities, which do not necessarily appear in the budget, but which are key to the development of Quebec's regions.
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Thanks for that question.
Through the chair, $250,000 is the threshold for the tax. A $250,000 boat could be a wakesetter boat, which is a sport boat that people would use for waterskiing, surfing or wakeboarding behind. Those boats are very much in that range. They could easily be an aluminum 28-foot to 32-foot fishing boat that has some electronics on it and power behind it. Those boats could easily exceed $250,000. These are not necessarily yachts.
When the Financial Post and the National Post did articles talking about boats over $250,000 when the proposal of this tax originally came out, the picture they attached to article was of a vessel that was probably $2.5 million or $3 million. This is not the case. These boats are family boats.
On the west coast, particularly when people go out for the weekend and sleep overnight in their boats and go up and down the coast, this is a very average family type of boat. It's capturing many, many people with this price range.
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I'll give you my answer, and my colleague may then add to it.
Yes, there's a land access issue, but unemployment also causes problems. We're discussing housing, but many businesses are looking for employees, especially in the regions. They're looking for them everywhere so they can operate. However, those people have to be housed, but we don't have housing to offer them at affordable prices. In fact, there's simply no available housing right now, in any category.
We need to find ways to solve this problem because the major risk the regions face is that they may lose those businesses. They may leave, in some instances, for the larger centres. This is a huge problem.
Once we manage to attract a business to a rural area, the next challenge is to retain it. Housing is definitely part of the problem. Consequently, we have to find solutions to it and ways to adapt. In both Quebec and Canada, we've decided to occupy our land, but we may be losing significant pieces of it. We have to consider what that means economically. When we consider business retention, a distinction has to be made between what goes on in the major centres and what happens in the regions.
The labour shortage and lack of major housing developers are definitely problems.
However, the 2022 budget outlines three measures that I believe are very positive for our rural communities.
First, funding is budgeted to expedite housing construction, which will help support the municipal processes involved in planning and executing housing programs.
Second, the rapid housing initiative will be extended.
Lastly, funding is being granted to housing cooperatives.
These three programs represent $7 billion.
How can Quebec get its share in a way that helps it efficiently manage its programs.
What do you think the challenges are here?
Greetings to all the witnesses.
Thank you for being with us today. Thanks as well for your presentations, which are very interesting.
My questions are for Mr. Demers and Mr. Boulet, from the Fédération québécoise des municipalités.
Mr. Demers, you are the mayor of a magnificent municipality. My friend Jean-Claude Germain lives there, and it's always a pleasure for me to visit him.
You mentioned challenges regarding roads and dams, of which there are many in my region as well. Even if Internet access materializes, cellular telephone access is still a challenge. It's very important to have access to that type of service for safety reasons.
Mr. Boulet, I don't think you had time to discuss infrastructure, in particular, during your statement. I'll allow you some time to round out your presentation and then ask you my questions.
FQM's members adopted a resolution on infrastructure at their annual general meeting in late 2021 calling for more investment in municipal infrastructure by the two levels of government. A recurring theme in our demands is that funding be predictable and flexible. Mr. Demers discussed this a few years ago before the House of Commons Standing Committee on Transport, Infrastructure and Communities.
FQM's members also demand that the planning initiatives of the municipalities be used as investment decision-making criteria rather than fixed and at times restricted categories that prevent investment in crucial infrastructure such as municipal buildings, fire stations, municipal garages and dams. These demands on FQM's part are recurring, and we've made them under the Taxe sur l’essence et de la contribution du Québec, or TECQ, program, which is funded under the Canada community-building fund.
Since the program will expire in 2023, this is an excellent opportunity to design a new program that applies to more types of assets, including those previously cited, and that will provide longer-term funding. The TECQ program is a good example of a program tailored to the circumstances of the municipalities. All we need is to improve it by extending it and making it more flexible.
In closing, I would like to add a word on adapting to climate change, which is also related to infrastructure. The municipalities have a front row seat from which to observe climate change, and they will also be the first to have to adapt to it. The Canadian government should therefore partner with the municipalities to help them adapt to climate change and should make significant investments to that end.
I want to come back to the question of the CERB amnesty that Ms. Sarangi raised in her opening comments.
There are some provisions in the bill to make it easier for the government to pursue people for CERB debt that the government is claiming. Earlier at committee, I asked the government how much they expected, both what they thought they were owed and what they thought they would be able to reclaim. I want to share just a bit of their answer with you. Maybe as somebody who is an expert in the field, you can help decipher what some of these things mean.
I was surprised that the government said, in response to the question of how much government thinks it's owed for CERB repayments, that “Since post-verification was delayed to January 2022, there are limited results to report on at this time with respect to the volume and amount of CERB overpayments and recoveries.”
I find that curious, because we know—and I believe you said in your testimony, Ms. Sarangi—that the government has sent out a number of letters. I don't know if you have a sense of the quantity of letters they have sent out, but I know that at one time they had sent out over 400,000 letters to various Canadians asking for money back. Presumably they know how many letters they sent out; I think it would be distressing if they didn't. Also, presumably they have a sense of how much they told people they owe in those letters. I found it curious that there was no attempt to quantify that.
They say their work is going to continue over the next four years and that results will be reported as the work unfolds. Nevertheless, they also report that they announced $260 million over four years in the 2020 fall economic statement “to increase their capacity to detect, investigate and address cases of fraud or misrepresentation related to the Canada emergency response benefit”.
They don't know how much is out there and they don't know how much they want back, but they do know that it's worth spending at least $260 million to get it, whatever it happens to be.
I just wonder if you had a reaction to these answers similar to what I had and if, as somebody who is working with people who are directly affected by the government's vigorous attempts to recover this money, you might be able to help fill in some of the blanks around how worthwhile it is to pursue this money.
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Through the chair, thank you for that question.
I am concerned that they don't have an amount. They don't know how much they're owed or expect that they'll recoup, and at the same time, they're but money in pursuing people.
For that initial round of letters that were sent out in December of 2021—441,000 letters—we know they mostly went to low-income, racialized and indigenous people and people with disabilities, folks who lost their work. We know that about 75% of the CERB benefits went to those communities and to those individuals. Because CERB was broader than employment insurance, we know that racialized women working in precarious jobs were able to access CERB payments when they wouldn't have been able to access EI. When we talk about getting payments back, we're actually talking about communities who are already facing these multiple marginalizations.
I am a bit frightened as well that they're pursuing without the required amount of information. We asked people, “How is it going to impact you and how do you feel about receiving these letters or having to repay?” People used words like “devastation”, “traumatic”, “bankruptcy” and “going into homelessness”. There were real worries about not being able to care for their kids and having child welfare come in and intervene if people will not be able to appropriately care for their kids.
This is going to continue to be detrimental. I mentioned that in July there will be more clawbacks, but the fact that this will go on for several years, the fallout, this ongoing retraumatizing of folks, is very concerning.
At our end, we have been trying to get a copy of the letters to find out those similar questions and what they are saying about how much people owe. We're finding it so hard to find that information. Even when people are being dealt with on an individual level, it just makes it harder to get that broader assessment.
Like you, I feel very concerned and very worried. I don't believe there will be much to recoup from families who are already in debt and who already have accessed their lines of credit and their credit cards. They've collected rent arrears. There are student loans that people are still repaying. There's just nothing for people to be able to give back, so I really don't see this as a worthwhile pursuit, but we know that it's going to cost hundreds of millions of dollars for the federal government to pursue this action.
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Another component of the answer that I found curious talked about how they're willing to work with families one-on-one on repayment plans. Of course, we know that in some cases we're talking about families who don't have any flex in their budgets. If you were talking about something they could afford, you might be talking about five dollars a month or something like that.
They say, “This approach allows ESDC and the CRA to be responsive to each individual's unique financial situation, as opposed to an amnesty, which may not capture everyone's financial hardship situation.” I mean, I am finding it....
You know, when it comes to deliberate fraud, there are rules about that. There's a whole infrastructure that prohibits fraud. Fraud was always illegal. There were additional provisions passed during the pandemic making fraud—I don't know—more illegal, I guess, but certainly addressing it directly. For people who were deliberately fraudulent, there's a way to pursue those folks. What we're talking about is a larger category, which could include people who applied in good faith, really thinking they were eligible, and who were experiencing real financial hardship as a result of the pandemic, and in some cases were told either by government MPs or by government officials at the CRA to apply now and figure it out later.
Of course, they're not able to figure it out later. They'd been given the impression that they were eligible for the money and they weren't in a position to be able to hold it in an account. They were applying because they were desperate at the time, given the circumstances of the pandemic.
I'm just wondering, how does an amnesty not respond to that concern?
My questions are still for Mr. Demers and Mr. Boulet.
Over the past few months, in committee and in the House, we have spent a lot of time studying the dramatic rise in real estate prices and the housing shortage. The government has frequently said that if there is not enough housing, it's because the process for municipal projects is too slow. You can find these comments in Hansard. It's almost a federal government leitmotif.
This is also reflected in the most recent budget, in which the minister announced that in order to ensure that the municipalities could build enough housing units, the government would link infrastructure funding, including public transportation, to measures taken by the provinces, the territories and the municipalities to increase housing supply.
What's your opinion on this?
:
I'll make a start on answering this and will then give the floor to Mr. Goulet.
Governments often bounce the problem back to the municipalities, and tell them that the process is too slow. However, what the municipalities repeatedly ask for is predictability.
The federal government tells us that money available this year and that it is prepared to invest. It then asks us why the projects are not moving forward.
It's important to understand that the process of undertaking a major project requires several years. There is zoning and land use planning. The launch of a big project has to be planned. Residents also need to be consulted. We have obligations when any zoning changes are made. People have the right to express their opinion at each of these stages.
When the federal or provincial government decides on the spur of the moment to provide funding, it doesn't work.
That's why we prefer a model like the one used in the fuel tax program, for example. This tax applies on a five-year basis, which provides predictability. The funds can be used right away and reimbursed later. That's the kind of initiative that works.
Things have to be predictable. Major projects are so unwieldy that it's difficult to make changes overnight. If the land use and zoning issues are assessed ahead of time, and then discussed with residents, we can achieve something. Otherwise, the various levels of government will continue to toss the ball back and forth. When we get to the final stages, people will say that the building costs have skyrocketed and that the labour is not available.
There have to be systems in place. The housing problem could have been anticipated. It's as if everyone became more aware of it than ever over the past year.
You also spoke about the repayment or collection of overpayments from individuals, regardless of their economic situation. With regard to full amnesty for people who can't afford to pay it back, I tend to agree with that statement. I know Mr. Blaikie mentioned it as well. Also mentioned was how much money is in the budget to try to collect that money back—some $260 million, I think, is what he mentioned.
In my opinion, the government would spend more trying to collect the money back than what they would actually get back. It's a negative thing to do. You're spending more to collect. You're spending $10 to get back $5. It doesn't benefit anyone. I think it's probably something that should be looked at, doing exactly what you're asking. Mr. Lawrence referred to “blood from a stone”; in Newfoundland we say, “You can't get blood from a turnip” if somebody can't pay a bill. Sometimes it's just better to take the loss, walk away and be satisfied with that.
I don't know whether you want to comment on the full amnesty thing before my time runs out. If so, I'd appreciate it.
Anecdotally, I can tell you from experience in my riding in Simcoe North that most, if not all, of the motel rentals—traditional motel properties—are no longer short-term stays. They are filling a void in the marketplace because there's not only a lack of rental accommodations but also a lack of affordable accommodations. I totally understand where the stories you're hearing across the country are coming from. I'm experiencing it in my own riding.
Sticking on the subject for a moment, the longer inflation goes on, I think the more of a challenge it is for those on fixed income, including those in the older age categories, but also those with families. The Bank of Canada said inflation hurts the lower-income folks the most. I think that's why we need to be very focused on this issue.
I am also sympathetic to this view that the government is going to go after individuals who don't have a capacity to pay and is going to spend a lot of money in trying to do that. I appreciated my colleague, Mr. Blaikie, for uncovering how much money they intend to spend.
I don't want to put you on the spot here, but in a general sense, how does it make you feel, or what's your reaction to hearing how much money the government's going to spend trying to recover this money from low-income individuals?
At the same time, there are examples of the government not recovering money, whether it's through the Panama papers. There were 900 people whose names were provided to this government, but there's not been a criminal conviction. They expect to recover maybe $20 million. They've only completed 200 audits. There's that group of individuals. There are also these large corporations that we just gave billions and billions of dollars to without any kind of restriction, and then they paid dividends to their shareholders. The government seems to have lots of money to subsidize share prices for corporate individuals across the country, yet when it comes to the lowest-income folks, your organization is being told by the government, “Well, we're going to spend $200 million to go after them.” How does that make you feel?
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Mrs. Sarangi, kudos to you for the work you've done. One child or one person in poverty is one too many.
When I became involved in politics, it was in 2015, and I was always.... As far as the efficacy of groups like yours goes, even in my home province, they always had an open door and an ear to listen, and there have been some tremendous things done.
The child tax benefit was huge. We'll have child care at $10 a day. I know there are no stats on that, but it's going over very well. There's dental care. The EI reform, again, is something that I think will help, especially where I come from, where we have real seasonality and many temporary foreign workers who will now be able to become permanent residents.
One that always gets forgotten in the conversations is seniors in poverty. Our government raised the GIS by 10%, but can you talk a bit about what the next...? You said there's no silver bullet, but what's your next vision for poverty in Canada? What should the government be looking at?
I'm going to switch now, Chair, to Mr. Goddard.
I have quite a few small craft breweries in P.E.I. and some in my riding, Mr. Goddard, and I always struggle with.... As we've heard over the past number of years, relevant to a lot of the bigger corporations buying up the small craft breweries....
You talked about the excise tax, which is fine—that's obviously an issue—but the small craft breweries in P.E.I. produce about 3,000 to 4,000 hectolitres a year. The one that is likely the largest in Atlantic Canada, which I consider a small craft brewery, produces around 15,000 hectolitres a year. That's the breakdown on the representation of those breweries.
We talk about breweries building themselves around communities and being local small craft breweries. Where is the division? How do you separate the big guys from the little guys, when we know that the profit margins of some of the bigger breweries are 60% to 70%?
:
Thank you for the question, Mr. Ste-Marie.
I'd like to begin by talking to you about the fuel tax, which comes up often. We were told several times that this tax would be used more widely, for things like fire stations and city halls. But it should, at the very least, include dams.
Among the most serious impacts of climate change were the major floods that occurred here in 2017 and 2019, particularly in Quebec. There will be others; it's only a matter of time.
Preventive measures should be taken because some small municipalities don't have the resources to reinforce their dams, nor the right to use funds from the fuel tax program and Quebec's contribution to maintain these dams.
It's true of course that maintenance is needed for roads, municipal buildings and water distribution facilities, but why not provide measures that would allow us to deal with emergencies? It seems logical to me. We're not asking for additional funds. What we're asking for is flexibility in how we use these funds. Otherwise, it would be a matter of asking whether the management of these dams ought not to be a matter for the federal government or a different level of government.
Essentially, we should at least have access to these funds. We are making our culverts bigger, and doing various other sorts of work. We know that we need to be resilient. We are aware of the repercussions of climate change, but we also need to protect our neighbours, particularly those who live downstream from our region. The water flow needs to be managed to prevent the water level from rising too quickly.
There is a lot of investment in our infrastructures, but what's required is funding flexibility.
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As I mentioned before, we all know that these inflationary increases are having a real impact on low-income families.
Those benefits that you mentioned—the GST credit and others—will be subject to clawback if we don't have a full-serve amnesty. To be clear, those benefits will be garnisheed from people who are asked to repay the CERB and the CRB to offset any payments that are owed.
I really want to stress the accessibility of benefits for people. People have to file their income tax forms to be able to receive income benefits. We appreciate the measures your party has put forward. We also need to look at those who are not filing income taxes or who are experiencing barriers to accessing some of the benefits.
Very quickly, I'll talk about the Canada child benefit. It's tied to immigration status. A person who is here and waiting for immigration to make a settlement or a ruling on their immigration status may be working, paying their taxes and paying into the system, and sometimes may even have Canadian-born children, but that person is not eligible to receive the benefit because it's arbitrarily tied to their immigration status.
We need to be looking at all of these programs and ensuring that people who experience multiple and systemic marginalization have access. They have to be low-barrier programs. They have to be available for families. When we're reaching those who are the furthest away, we're going to bring everybody along in our programs.
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I'm going to ask Mr. Boulet to give more precise figures.
I would nevertheless like to give a clear idea of what constitutes a rural community. When the Federation of Canadian Municipalities talks about rural communities, it is talking about municipalities whose population is under 100,000 residents.
Of Quebec's 1,108 municipalities, only 10 have a population of more than 100,000. Some consider the remaining municipalities to be rural, but in the eyes of many people, Quebec municipalities with a population of 50,000, 75,000 or 80,000, are not necessarily rural communities.
Different people can interpret these figures in different ways. In Quebec, there are not even 100 municipalities with over 25,000 residents…
:
Thanks very much, Mr. Chair.
Mr. Hayne, with respect to the luxury tax, one of the things that surprises me—it's kind of shocking that it exists—is that this government consistently taxes tax.
One of the principles behind tax law across the world is that we tax on a wealth accretion. If someone is doing well, we make them pay back to their society, but there is absolutely no ground, in tax law or otherwise, to tax a tax. That person is already getting penalized. For example, the HST is charged on the carbon tax, which doesn't make any sense—or I got that vice versa, but you understand the point.
One of the reasons the finance ministry has said that they charge this is that it's too hard for them to calculate. Would it be too hard for your members to calculate the difference between charging luxury tax on the HST, or would your members be able to calculate that, since the government can't?
To the witnesses, we really thank you.
I thank the clerk, Alexandre, for bringing us all together in such short order and for getting it all prepared and ready. I know there wasn't much time.
On behalf of the finance committee, the members and, of course, the clerk, analysts, interpreters and everybody here, we really thank you for your time and expertise and for answering so many questions. We really appreciate it, and we wish you a great day.
Thank you very much.
The meeting is adjourned.