Evidence of meeting #10 for Canada-China Relations in the 44th Parliament, 1st Session. (The original version is on Parliament’s site, as are the minutes.) The winning word was companies.

A video is available from Parliament.

On the agenda

MPs speaking

Also speaking

Carl Breau  Chief Executive Officer, Saimen Inc., As an Individual
Charles Burton  Senior Fellow, Centre for Advancing Canada's Interests Abroad, Macdonald-Laurier Institute, As an Individual
Margaret McCuaig-Johnston  Senior Fellow, Graduate School of Public and International Affairs and Institute of Science, Society and Policy, University of Ottawa, As an Individual

6:35 p.m.

Liberal

The Chair Liberal Ken Hardie

I call the meeting to order.

Welcome to meeting 10 of the House of Commons Special Committee on the Canada-People's Republic of China relationship.

Pursuant to the order of reference of May 16, 2022, the committee is meeting on its study of the Canada–People’s Republic of China relationship, with a focus on the exposure of Canadian investment funds to Chinese equities and bonds linked to human rights violations for the first hour, before going in camera for committee business.

Today’s meeting is taking place in a hybrid format, pursuant to the House order of June 23, 2022. Members are attending in person in the room and remotely by using the Zoom application.

For the benefit of the witnesses and members, I have a few comments at the start.

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 and please mute yourself when you are not speaking. For interpretation for those on Zoom, you have the choice, at the bottom of your screen, of “floor”, “English” or “French”. For those in the room, you can use the earpiece and select the desired channel.

I remind you that 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.

In accordance with the committee's routine motion concerning connection tests for witnesses, I can inform the committee that all witnesses have completed the required connection tests in advance of the meeting.

I would like to welcome Mr. Schmale, who is wearing a blank look right now, but I'm sure he will be joining us in due course.

I will welcome our witnesses for this first hour. We have, as individuals, Carl Breau, chief executive officer of Saimen Inc.; Charles Burton, senior fellow, Centre for Advancing Canada's Interests Abroad in the Macdonald-Laurier Institute; and Margaret McCuaig-Johnston, senior fellow, Graduate School of Public and International Affairs and Institute for Science, Society and Policy, University of Ottawa.

Mr. Breau, we will start with you. You have five minutes for your opening statement. Keep an eye on your monitor. Unless you have yourself timed, I will give you the old standard floor director's “just about time to wrap it up” signal.

You can begin now for five minutes. Thank you, sir.

6:35 p.m.

Carl Breau Chief Executive Officer, Saimen Inc., As an Individual

Thank you very much, and thank you for having me.

My name is Carl Breau, and I am the CEO of companies Nummax and Saimen, both active in electronics and the manufacturing of electromechanical products, both in Canada and China. Total revenue is about $20 million.

I am a Canadian citizen. I'm an engineer. I speak French and English and I can actually speak, read, and write in Chinese Mandarin, although my writing in Mandarin certainly looks like a five-year-old's. I live in Canada, but I also own a home in Shanghai, China, where I spend a lot of time.

I'm a business mentor for many entrepreneurs in Canada, U.S.A., and China. I'm actually an associate and mentor at the Creative Destruction Lab in Canada. I was also nominated as an MBA program learning mentor at the China Europe International Business School in Shanghai, which is generally recognized as the highest-rated MBA program in Asia.

Finally, I'm a certified board director and have board membership experience both in Canada and China. I hold patents and trademarks in China. I have received the Canadian Council of Professional Engineers medal for exceptional achievement by a young engineer. I am no longer young, so I guess that was some time ago.

The first topic I would like to address deals with supply chain traceability, transparency and best practices.

Overall, the business environment in China is actually very transparent. Accounting is based on Fapiao accounting, meaning that all transactions are recorded at the tax office at the time they occur. Most company information is public and readily accessible, including legal records, ownership structures, labour disputes, number of employees, credit ratings, etc.

Supply chain best practices in China, which I can also witness to, are actually the same pretty much as everywhere else. Language and distance can perhaps make things a bit more complex. The key is to do proper due diligence, do a mapping of your supply chain, sort of knowing whom you're buying from, but also knowing who you're buying from is buying from.

You need to do frequent audits of your suppliers or partners, which in some cases can be done remotely using recent technology, as it is done today.

Let's be reminded that we're buyers or investors in most of the examples here, so we can actually require all the transparency that we want. If we're not happy, we don't need to buy or invest in China. As buyers, we can set the traceability protocols and we can have any compliance requirements we need.

Having said that, I would also like to emphasize the importance of building enforceable, clear and detailed contracts with your business partners in China, or really anywhere around the world. All of these are common practices, so I like to tell my business friends, when they come to China, to please not leave your brain on the plane. Do things the way you think they should be done, no matter where you are.

Finally, regarding supply chain management, technology can help. There are blockchain tools now, which are more and more common, to help with traceability. Of course, remote auditing and online quality control tools have evolved considerably in the last few years, and access to live camera feeds in working areas is sometimes possible.

I would like to say a few words on corporate compliance and responsibility from our perspective.

In China, there's the notion of a company legal representative, which generally means a company director. The company legal representative, as the name implies, has significant personal legal responsibilities with regard to the operations of companies and compliance, so this is an important role to understand and manage properly.

The so-called registered capital gaps set the investor's financial responsibilities in case of default with employees or suppliers, so you need to understand that. Essentially, it's the difference between the amount set as a registered capital requirement and the actual capital invested in the company. That sets the remaining potential responsibility of investors in China, which can be significant.

A person cannot declare personal bankruptcy in China, so that creates that extra level of responsibility. Whatever personal debts or responsibilities, arise from some of the issues above, a person cannot actually escape from them in China.

I would like to say a few words about cascading or firewalling.

It's very common for Canadian companies investing in China to actually do that through another company in between, in a place, for example, like Singapore. That shields the Canadian company from most of its responsibilities for its investment in China, so it's considered good practice, because it protects investors. At the same time, it sort of disengages investors from their responsibilities in foreign countries, including China, so that can be a little bit of a dilemma.

Finally, on the topic of living in and doing business in China, I think China is a good place to do business in full compliance with international standards. It comes back to who is managing and making decisions. I feel totally safe when I am in China, both as a business owner and in my private life.

I do feel that there is considerable bias in how information about China is reported in the news and social media. I personally don’t rely very much on this often distorted information to make any decision.

I sure hope I can make a positive contribution to this committee. Thank you very much for having me and for your attention.

6:40 p.m.

Liberal

The Chair Liberal Ken Hardie

Thank you very much, Mr. Breau.

We'll now turn to Dr. Burton for five minutes.

6:40 p.m.

Dr. Charles Burton Senior Fellow, Centre for Advancing Canada's Interests Abroad, Macdonald-Laurier Institute, As an Individual

Thank you very much.

Canada's new Indo-Pacific policy defines China as an “increasingly disruptive global power.” Others of our like-minded democratic allies are using more straightforward language in identifying that their national policies should regard China as a strategic competitor or systemic rival. After reading over a lot of the evidence given to this committee, I judge that what we're really talking about here is China as an emerging strategic adversary.

China's geo-strategic agenda is shaped by the ideology of the Chinese Communist Party as expounded by its general secretary, Xi Jinping, which is transparently hostile to Canada and the west’s liberal values.

China as a nation, Chinese culture and the Chinese people are not what this is about, but right now, we have to recognize that the Communist Party is what it is. China’s 2017 revision of the constitution of their party makes it clear that the party exercises overall leadership over all areas of endeavour in every part of the country.

As Xi Jinping has put it, quoting Chairman Mao, “Party, government, military, civilian, and academic; east, west, south, north and centre, the Party leads everything.” A commentary by the official Xinhua News Agency on the statement by Mr. Xi says that the party exercises all leadership in all areas of endeavour in this country.

The People’s Republic of China's Chinese Communist Party regime is an integrated party-state-military-security-industrial complex, under which, as they put it, the party's leadership is “absolute,” “powerful,” “comprehensive” and “unified.”

All business enterprises in China are subject to direction and coordination by the Chinese Communist Party and are able to be deployed for non-commercial regime-strategic purposes, and we see a lot of this, unfortunately. There are no Chinese industrial or commercial enterprises existing independently from China’s party-state. While some important Chinese businesses, such as Huawei, are not deemed state-owned enterprises as such, they are still integral components of China’s Communist Party regime integrated into the overall purposes of the Chinese Communist Party-state. That's why we're not allowing the Huawei 5G software and hardware into our Canadian telecommunications networks.

Moreover, Chinese enterprises can reciprocally draw on the Chinese military and intelligence services to bring technology and data to their commercial advantage—as there is compelling evidence that Huawei, for example, has done—so China's integrated regime is able to mobilize business relations to further its purposes in a variety of aspects. Let me mention a few.

First of all is technology transfer. There are many examples of the foreign party’s technology or proprietary manufacturing processes being transferred to the Chinese regime.

Then there is espionage. The mobilization of Chinese businesses to facilitate espionage is well established. Leaving aside the provision of China’s intelligence law requiring all Chinese citizens to collaborate with security and intelligence when called upon to do so, the integrated nature of the regime allows for smooth melding of the profit motive and pursuit of geostrategic advantage. The latter always trumps economic benefit.

Then we have economic coercion and retaliation for states that have unfriendly, as China deems it, policies. We see economic coercion by the Chinese regime to pressure foreign governments to comply with Chinese non-economic demands on them. For example, when the South Korean LOTTE conglomerate had the terminal high altitude air defence missile defence system designed to counter North Korean missiles installed on a LOTTE golf course, LOTTE’s operations in China were affected by the simultaneous close-down of the operations of its many department stores in China on false grounds of fire code violations. We all know about the Canadian canola seed producers who had their contracts with China cancelled on false claims that their product was contaminated by non-seed matter.

We also have support of illegal police operations in foreign nations. As our government has observed, Chinese businesses in Canada have sent false letters of invitation to facilitate fraudulent visa applications by Chinese police to enter Canada to engage in illegal activities.

Then we have the enforcement of “discourse power”, whereby several multinational companies have had to “correct”—as one might put it—their websites and issue apologies for non-compliance with Chinese regime discourse that the Taiwanese government is an illegitimate rogue regime that will be returned to the embrace of the motherland as a Chinese province and be ruled from Beijing. For example, the Marriott hotel website was blocked in China until they ceased to identify Taiwan as a separate market for their hotel business.

Let me conclude by saying that investment by Canada in Chinese business carries the risk of Canada becoming complicit in all of these things that I have mentioned, even if rigorous due diligence is done before investment is made.

I thank you, Mr. Chair.

6:50 p.m.

Liberal

The Chair Liberal Ken Hardie

Thank you, Mr. Burton.

We'll now go to Margaret McCuaig-Johnston.

Before I start the clock, perhaps you can share with us the story of your white ribbon.

6:50 p.m.

Margaret McCuaig-Johnston Senior Fellow, Graduate School of Public and International Affairs and Institute of Science, Society and Policy, University of Ottawa, As an Individual

Thank you, Mr. Chair.

I too am wearing a white ribbon, as many MPs are, for December 6. That's because I was the director responsible for women in science and engineering in 1989 when the Polytechnique attack took place. It was MPs themselves who started wearing the white ribbon at that moment. Others, like myself, followed suit.

I have kept my white ribbon all these years and I bring it out every year.

Thank you, Mr. Chair.

6:50 p.m.

Liberal

The Chair Liberal Ken Hardie

All right. We will now go to the business at hand.

6:50 p.m.

Senior Fellow, Graduate School of Public and International Affairs and Institute of Science, Society and Policy, University of Ottawa, As an Individual

Margaret McCuaig-Johnston

Thank you, and thank you to the committee for inviting me to present today.

I come to this issue from the perspective of one who has tracked Chinese technology developments for decades, but I have also closely followed human rights issues in China since 1979, when I went to the Xidan democracy wall in Beijing to talk to the workers and the students there.

China is now using advanced technology surveillance equipment against the Uighur people, but also in Tibet and Mongolia and against members of Christian “house churches” across China.

What would Canadians think if they knew that the CPPIB has more than a billion of their dollars invested in Tencent, which owns WeChat, which is being used to monitor and censor the communications of Uighurs, Tibetans and zero-COVID protesters?

The company Alibaba makes video cameras that look down from every corner in the crowded cells of Uighurs in indoctrination camps and prisons. What would those Uighurs think if they knew that Canadian pensioners had invested in those video cameras? Its software is also designed to pick a Uighur out of a crowd.

Neusoft is a Chinese tech firm that was asked to build a system to target journalists, migrant women and international students so that public security authorities can quickly locate them and obstruct their work. Both CPPIB and the Caisse de dépôt have investments in Neusoft.

This committee learned last week that CPPIB invests in two Morgan Stanley indices that include 13 companies making money from the genocide. The board says they don’t invest directly in those companies, but they have said they do invest in index funds, giving exposure to as many as 10,000 securities in very small amounts—only a million dollars or two, and sometimes even smaller. Those are their words.

We’re often told by CPPIB that the board invests in companies and not in countries, but when Chinese authorities ask a company to design even more repressive surveillance equipment to use against certain categories of citizens, that argument falls apart. Companies in China fall under government direction and not just market forces, and they now all have Communist Party committees that are increasingly active in decision-making.

I have several recommendations.

First, we need to have an entities list, as the U.S. has, prohibiting Canadian investment in named Chinese genocide and forced labour companies. It does not need to be the same list as the Americans have, but it must be focused on companies serving the Uighur genocide and the surveillance state.

Second, pension and university funds in Canada must be transparent about their investments in China. For example, if a Chinese surveillance company wants a confidentiality agreement, CPPIB respects that, and it does not publish information that is commercially sensitive in some circumstances. These practices obscure investments that are harming human rights.

Third, pension funds must be willing to engage in discussion with civil society about their investments. They may say they use an ethical lens, but what informs that lens when company policy forbids the investment managers from meeting Canadians to hear their concerns first-hand? Any such meetings are with a communications officer, seemingly to keep a PR lid on the discussion.

Fourth, while private investors may pursue the highest return independent of ethics, for a Crown corporation investing public monies there is a higher bar, especially when the government identifies human rights as a principal concern. Its code of ethics should be mandated by the government, whether federal or provincial.

Finally, I would hope that pension funds and universities are now looking more broadly at the economic and geopolitical risks with Chinese investments, including in the tech sector, real estate, unexpected regulations and threats against Taiwan. I believe that our pension funds and university trust funds are smart enough to make the transition that would put themselves on the right side of Canadians’ ethics as well as their wallets.

Thank you.

6:55 p.m.

Liberal

The Chair Liberal Ken Hardie

Thank you very much, Ms. McCuaig-Johnston.

We will now go to our first round of questioning and to Ms. Dancho for six minutes or less.

December 6th, 2022 / 6:55 p.m.

Conservative

Raquel Dancho Conservative Kildonan—St. Paul, MB

Thank you, Mr. Chair, and thank you very much to the witnesses for being here today. It's quite an interesting background from all of you. Certainly your opening remarks were very diverse and very informative.

Ms. McCuaig-Johnston, I do have a few questions for you.

You've outlined quite clearly that Canada's CPP, or pension plan, is invested in companies that use quite advanced surveillance technology that's capable of picking out—as you mentioned specifically—Uighurs or a big a group of people if this technology is engaged. This is certainly extremely concerning, particularly in light of what we've all learned that they are doing to the Uighur population.

You also rightly pointed out that one of the primary values of the government is human rights. With your expertise and knowledge, what sort of grade would you provide the Canadian government in living up to that key value in terms of our investments with our pension or other public dollars that are going to these types of companies? What grade would you give them?

6:55 p.m.

Senior Fellow, Graduate School of Public and International Affairs and Institute of Science, Society and Policy, University of Ottawa, As an Individual

Margaret McCuaig-Johnston

I would give them a “D” because they have not yet done enough to ensure that their funds are not going towards these genocidal companies.

I do give them some credit. They did move out of the direct investment in iFlytek. iFlytek is a company that does voice recognition technology, and Uighurs are all taken to their local police station so that their voices can be recorded in different modulations so that the police will understand who exactly is speaking on telephone calls when they listen in.

I was very pleased, and in fact in an op-ed, I commended the CPPIB for moving out of that investment, but unfortunately I've learned that iFlytek is captured under one of the index funds that they do invest in, so it's a continuing concern. It's not enough just to stand back and invest in a broad set of funds that include genocide companies; you have to look at every single one of the companies to ensure that they're not one of those contributing to the Uighur genocide.

It's unconscionable, in my view, to have technology that's funded by Canadians being used against Uighurs. It's remarkably tragic.

6:55 p.m.

Conservative

Raquel Dancho Conservative Kildonan—St. Paul, MB

Thank you very much for that answer. I very much appreciate it.

I'd like to ask the same question to Mr. Burton. It's wonderful to see you again. Thank you for being here.

What grade would you give the current government on living up to their values on human rights with respect to what we're talking about today, having our pension plan investing in these Chinese companies and others?

6:55 p.m.

Senior Fellow, Centre for Advancing Canada's Interests Abroad, Macdonald-Laurier Institute, As an Individual

Dr. Charles Burton

I think that Margaret's “D” is perhaps a little generous. We really have to be much more aware of the implications of our investment in terms of whether we're enabling a regime that is potentially hostile to us.

I quite agree with Margaret about the technologies that are being used to enable the Uighur genocide, but I think there are a lot of other areas in which, unless we really are on top of exactly where the money is going and who is using it, it can be used for things that are hostile both to our values and to Canada's national interest.

I'd like to see, if we're going to invest in China, a lot more government supervision of what our pension plans and university endowments are doing.

6:55 p.m.

Conservative

Raquel Dancho Conservative Kildonan—St. Paul, MB

It sounds as though we're hearing that investors and those on the CPPIB—I believe that stands for CPP Investment Board—in particular are saying that it's only a few million bucks here and there, and it's through an index fund. I haven't spoken to them personally, but it sounds, from what Ms. McCuaig-Johnston shared and from Mr. Burton's feedback, as though they're making excuses.

Would you say this is something doable? Could Canada say we're not investing any taxpayer dollars or any public programs in anything that is harming any of the groups that are marginalized and abused or in any group that is engaging in genocide against Uighurs and others? Is that actually a doable thing? Can we as a country achieve that if we put our mind to it?

7 p.m.

Senior Fellow, Centre for Advancing Canada's Interests Abroad, Macdonald-Laurier Institute, As an Individual

Dr. Charles Burton

I would prefer that our pension plans look elsewhere for profitable investments, but if we're insisting that we're going to continue to regard China as a systemic rival in the first part of the week and in the latter part of the week say that we can engage with them, then we really have to be going about this with much more care and transparency than we're seeing.

I think any investments in China are potentially going against Canadian interests, because we don't have control over what the Communist Party directs Chinese companies to do.

7 p.m.

Conservative

Raquel Dancho Conservative Kildonan—St. Paul, MB

It's over to you, Ms. McCuaig-Johnston.

7 p.m.

Senior Fellow, Graduate School of Public and International Affairs and Institute of Science, Society and Policy, University of Ottawa, As an Individual

Margaret McCuaig-Johnston

We probably can't do it overnight so that next week we will have a clean slate, but we can do it quickly. We have talented investment managers in these funds. They're paid a lot of money. They're given incentives to increase the profits of the funds. They need to be incented for good governance and for human rights. This should be a target of every board. The obvious ones to get out of are Tencent and Alibaba. Both of those companies are very complicit in human rights infringements across China. Those are the number ones.

They also need to be able to take a look at these index funds. It seems bizarre to have an organization called Hong Kong Watch based in London, England, telling CPPIB what their investments are by the dollar in a range of 13 different genocidal companies. Surely the investment managers themselves know that. They should be able to get themselves out of those investments and move to different funds.

I don't think it would happen overnight, but I think it could happen within a month or two.

7 p.m.

Liberal

The Chair Liberal Ken Hardie

Thank you very much, Ms. Dancho.

We'll now go to Mr. Fragiskatos for six minutes or less.

7 p.m.

Liberal

Peter Fragiskatos Liberal London North Centre, ON

Thank you, Chair. Thank you to our witnesses.

Professor McCuaig-Johnston, I recognize that the investment board of the CPP is independent and I don't want to get into the particulars on that, but I think it's important to put on the record that it does not operate at the dictates of the Canadian government.

I do want to delve into some of your remarks. Hopefully you can build upon them by giving us an understanding of what other countries have done in terms of their investment boards with respect to pensions or other ways of investing that you think Canada should look at. We recognize, of course, that in other countries too, in democracies, investment boards operate independently.

Do you have thoughts on other models?

7 p.m.

Senior Fellow, Graduate School of Public and International Affairs and Institute of Science, Society and Policy, University of Ottawa, As an Individual

Margaret McCuaig-Johnston

The U.K., France and Germany have better track records on this than we do.

I know there's a lot of exchange among the various boards and pension funds, so I know that they have an ability to learn from those best practices. They're well documented in the recent report of Hong Kong Watch, which looks at a range of countries, including the U.S. and Canada.

7 p.m.

Liberal

Peter Fragiskatos Liberal London North Centre, ON

Thank you very much.

Let me just change focus for a moment.

On November 29, you wrote an op-ed for The Globe and Mail. You put forward a number of points, but if I understood you correctly, you kind of give an understanding or a view on where China is headed, in light of the protests that have materialized there in recent weeks.

Can you share with the committee your point of view on where China could be going?

7 p.m.

Senior Fellow, Graduate School of Public and International Affairs and Institute of Science, Society and Policy, University of Ottawa, As an Individual

Margaret McCuaig-Johnston

I'm very concerned about where China's going. I have many good friends in China. I look at the zero-COVID policy and I see the effect that it has had on the human rights of people being forced to stay home for months on end. The Uighurs have been at home since August without adequate food replenishment, so I've been concerned about that.

Now we're seeing that the national health commission is starting to ease up on some of the COVID restrictions. That's good to see in terms of the zero-COVID constraints, but the really concerning thing is that they don't have vaccines that will protect their population. Most of their seniors are not fully vaccinated. The vaccines they are using are less than effective. It seems that mRNA vaccines from the west have been offered to them, but they have not accepted them.

Xi Jinping is very much invested in his zero-COVID policy, and it seems he doesn't want to take vaccines from the west. They're going to have to do it or there are going to be millions of deaths, and it's really going to put a big strain on their hospital system.

7:05 p.m.

Liberal

Peter Fragiskatos Liberal London North Centre, ON

Thank you very much. I ask the question as a way to get back to what I first raised in terms of models of other countries with respect to investments.

Last week at our committee we heard testimony on that. The German model was explored and in fact pointed to as probably one of the most progressive ways that a country can address the question of investment. It's not a law that's active yet, but it will come into force very soon, so what you just told us is concerning in terms of China's current and potential future direction.

One issue that came up in committee last week was the challenge of administering that law. Clearly the law that the Germans are moving ahead with, or seem to be moving ahead with, is based on an ethical standard. I commend them for it, but no law is going to be effective unless it can be administered. There are questions about how exactly that law will be administered. It's very difficult to see, going forward, its efficacy.

Do you have any thoughts on that question of administration?

7:05 p.m.

Senior Fellow, Graduate School of Public and International Affairs and Institute of Science, Society and Policy, University of Ottawa, As an Individual

Margaret McCuaig-Johnston

I have every confidence that if Canada accepted the same approach, we would be able to implement it efficiently. I have tremendous respect for Heather Munroe-Blum, who is the chair of the CPPIB, and for their senior managers. They're very professional and solid people.

I don't see a problem with administering a policy that has a higher bar of ethics at its core. The fact that these are public monies—CPPIB is a Crown corporation, although I take your point that the government can't intervene to tell them what to fund—I think sets a broader standard for human rights within which Crown corporations must operate.

7:05 p.m.

Liberal

Peter Fragiskatos Liberal London North Centre, ON

Thank you very much.

I see that I have 45 seconds left.

Mr. Breau, I wanted to ask you a question, but it's limited now.

You put a number of things to us. Could you summarize your testimony in one recommendation? If you were to leave this committee with one key thought for us to consider, what would it be?