The Canadian manufacturing sector has been shrinking for some time. Since 2018, manufacturing as a percentage of GDP in Canada declined by 5%, while the comparable U.S. number increased by 10%. This is important because the manufacturing sector in any country is a key source of innovation, productivity and well-paid employment.
The manufacturing sector and the energy sector are closely linked, especially in Canada. Many manufacturing companies in eastern Canada are heavily dependent on the oil and gas sector for their success. Too many Canadians believe that if punitive policies are imposed on the oil and gas sector, that's Alberta's and Saskatchewan's problem, when in reality it significantly affects the welfare of the entire country. Manufacturing used to represent 20% of Canada's economy whereas it now sits at just under 10%.
The industrial carbon tax is very problematic for manufacturing businesses, and small and medium-sized businesses in general, for a number of reasons. High taxes are a key reason businesses are leaving Canada, mostly for the U.S. Adding another tax to the mix can hardly help our competitive position, notably with our largest—by far—trading partner.
Other countries, of course, do not impose such taxes.
As the tax will be levied on the oil and gas sector, among others, it will increase energy prices, which are already much too high. Manufacturers are big consumers of electricity and energy in general. They were made much more uncompetitive by these foolish failed so-called green policies. The industrial carbon tax will fall heavily on the manufacturing sector, as well as on energy—the two most productive sectors of the Canadian economy. We know that we have a serious productivity problem, so imposing an onerous industrial carbon tax on the two sectors that are most contributing to our productivity is just foolish. That affects, of course, our standard of living.
As well as feeding inflation for businesses and consumers, the industrial carbon tax adds another layer of red tape and complexity to businesses, which means additional business costs that will be passed on to consumers.
The fact that carbon credit prices have plummeted is an indication that the carbon trading market is not functioning well.
This tax is also hidden, making it more difficult to estimate its impact and gauge its effectiveness. The tax is just another reason why businesses and investment are fleeing Canada for more competitive jurisdictions. Government policy that claims to want to attract investment back into Canada, yet imposes taxes like the industrial carbon tax, is basically like trying to suck and blow at the same time.
PM Carney recently said that the so-called decarbonized carbon—which is kind of like water that isn't wet—will be in great demand around the world, so all of these very costly investments in decarbonization will be worthwhile. This is absolutely not true. Other countries want our oil and gas now, as is, and mostly couldn't care less about decarbonization. In fact, all of the costs imposed on business by this tax, plus the immensely expensive carbon capture and storage projects planned, will more likely price Canadian businesses out of the market than confer any kind of price advantage.
Canada missed a huge opportunity to provide Canadians and the world with affordable, dependable, responsibly produced energy by foolish Liberal policies of the last decade, such as the industrial carbon tax, which knee-capped our most valuable single economic sector: oil and gas. This was a major contributor to the decline in the Canadian standard of living for the last 11 years and to the fact that Canada currently ranks at the bottom of international economic comparisons.
I'd like to close with something I heard just a few days ago from one of our board members of the CCMBC. She recently opened a U.S. location for her very successful medium-sized manufacturing business. She raves about how the U.S. environment for her business is terrific compared to the environment in Canada. She happened to meet a U.S. congressman recently. It wasn't even in a business context, but she was so pleased that he was genuinely interested in her business, asked a bunch of really good and relevant questions, and was very positive about government policy that was helping her hire more people. Her comment was, “If only Canadian government politicians could be so engaged and interested”.
This Liberal government doesn't seem at all concerned about truly consulting small and medium-sized firms. If it was, it wouldn't be pursuing policies as detrimental as the industrial carbon tax.
This industrial carbon tax, along with other punitive policies, means that Canadian businesses and workers suffer by losing jobs, going out of business or moving out of Canada, which many are doing. Uncompetitive conditions in the Canadian economy drove many manufacturers out of Canada long before Trump and his tariffs came along. Once a country loses its manufacturing sector, it doesn't get it back for a very long time, if ever.
Thank you.