Mr. Speaker, I am pleased to express my support for Bill C-55, which proposes a comprehensive set of reforms to Canada's insolvency system.
Bankruptcy is not a pleasant subject. No one enjoys the thought of financial hardship or the pain that goes along with it, but we must not forget that bankruptcy is a fact of life in a dynamic and evolving market economy.
Entrepreneurs need to borrow money to bring their ideas to the marketplace. Firms issue debt obligations to finance their investments and to create working capital. Consumers use credit to buy homes and goods and services that they need.
Borrowers must have a way to escape debt when it becomes insurmountable, but the rules must be fair so that creditors can assess their risk. An economy without bankruptcies would be an economy without credit markets. Entrepreneurship would be stifled, corporate expansion would be halted, and financially troubled individuals would be sentenced to live their lives under the weight of unmanageable debt.
By facilitating a fresh start, insolvency law promotes innovation and helps to push the economy on to new levels of productivity and competitiveness.
The reforms in this bill have four major elements. These elements are: one, to encourage restructuring of viable businesses; two, to improve protection for workers in bankruptcy as preferred creditors; three, to introduce an exemption for RRSPs and to lower the period of discharge for student loans to seven years, while tightening at the same time the rules for debtors with surplus income and with large income tax debt; and four, certain technical amendments to improve the administration of the insolvency system.
Before we go any further, let us look at some of the numbers. Last year over 100,000 individuals used the Bankruptcy and Insolvency Act. This accounted for over $11 billion in liabilities and resulted in $4 billion being redeployed into the economy. There were more than 50 corporate restructurings during that time period under the Companies' Creditors Arrangement Act. One of the largest was an $8 billion debt. That is right, $8 billion in liabilities in one case only.
The reforms in this bill will ensure that there is greater transparency in the process and a better ability for parties to defend their interests. Perhaps more important, it will promote fairness and efficiency in the marketplace so that more of the debt is recovered so that it can be plowed back into the system.
Today in individual cases there are now four bankruptcies for every thousand Canadians over 16 years of age. A similar growth has been observed in other countries. On the business side the growth in the number of bankruptcies has been much smaller in Canada. In fact, since our peak in the mid-1990s, the number of bankruptcies has decreased significantly. Canada used to have a business bankruptcy rate very much higher than that of the United States, but now we are actually noting that we have the same basic bankruptcy rate, which is four per thousand business establishments.
There is one other trend that is worth noting. In recent years more and more businesses and individuals are taking the opportunity to restructure their debt by something called a proposal. A proposal and restructuring in general allows a debtor to avoid bankruptcy while paying the creditor less than the full value of the debt. More than that, the creditor is receiving money it would never have received if the person had gone bankrupt. It is a better outcome for both and it is a very important part of the changes in this bill.
Since 1992 the number of restructurings has considerably increased because people are finding it is a win-win situation. A key goal of Bill C-55 is to improve that even more and to help people to restructure.
Before I go any further, I want to talk about how we got to this point. There was an extensive consultative process in 2001 and 2002 to identify issues and options to reform the Bankruptcy and Insolvency Act and the Companies' Creditors Arrangement Act. This consultation process produced the report on the operation and administration of the Bankruptcy and Insolvency Act and Companies' Creditors Arrangement Act which was tabled in Parliament in late 2002. Meanwhile in a parallel process the Office of the Superintendent of Bankruptcy appointed a personal insolvency task force to give some solutions to the problem.
In 2003 the Senate Standing Committee on Banking, Trade and Commerce conducted public hearings, reviewed more than 40 submissions and came up with a report entitled “Debtors and Creditors Sharing the Burden”. This report was published in November 2004 and contained detailed recommendations.
The consultation process was very extensive. In other words, nobody made this up. Everyone tried to find out some of the best answers. This included hearing from stakeholders from a broad spectrum of interests such as insolvency practitioners, representatives of financial institutions, the legal community, labour and business, consumer associations, students and members of the academic community. They all brought forward very flexible and creative solutions.
The bill in front of us is a culmination of all of that input. The proposals are basically four in nature. They are comprehensive, well informed and based on sound research. I believe they will ensure that Canada has a world class insolvency law that will support our dynamic economy, protect jobs, and ensure that Canada remains a good place to invest, to do business and to live.
Bill C-55 will provide better protection for workers through the creation of the wage earner protection program. There is the superpriority for wage provisions relating to collective agreements as we saw in the bill.
The novelty of this bill is it will do all of this while minimizing as much as possible any adverse effect on access to capital. We do not want to stymie access to capital. The impact on lenders has been minimized while not over-burdening taxpayers.
Most of the OECD countries have taken measures to protect employees in case of the bankruptcy of their employer. In Canada we have debated this issue for almost 25 years. Bill C-55 represents a major breakthrough and is indicative of the economic policy leadership of the government.
The bill will also make Canada more attractive to international investors by adopting the United Nations Commission on International Trade Laws model law on cross-border insolvency. Corporate insolvencies are more often stretching across borders as we well know. The adoption of the model law would make it easier for creditors to assess their risks in various jurisdictions and to avoid the necessity of duplicating proceedings in different jurisdictions. It would create a better ability for people to assess where they want to go and how they want to borrow and who wants to lend them money. The model law is being adopted by our major trading partners, including the United States and Japan, and we must follow suit.
This is an important piece of legislation. I urge all members of the House to support it.