Thank you very much, Mr. Chairman, and congratulations to the committee on your stamina.
You have a copy of our submission. I'd like to just hit a few points today, if I may, but first, quickly, here is a little about who we are.
The Toronto Financial Services Alliance is a public-private partnership between the City of Toronto and the financial services sector, dedicated to promoting the city and the region as a premier financial services centre in North America. We encourage initiatives to strengthen Toronto region's financial sector through competitive regulatory and taxation policies, strong post-secondary education and training opportunities, improved infrastructure, and quality of life investments in Canada's financial capital.
Our group includes the major players in the financial services sector: banks, insurance, securities, trade associations, as well as the professionals who support the sector, such as lawyers, accountants, information technology, etc. We also have the support of post-secondary institutions in our region.
With more than 250,000 people directly employed in the sector, and approximately that number again working in jobs that depend on the industry, Toronto's economic success depends on a strong financial sector. Canada, too, has a lot at stake, because the sector is Canada's largest industry and contributes more than 6% to our national gross domestic product.
The sector also tends to be generally more productive than other sectors, as we generate that 6% while employing 4% of the national workforce. Productivity and our concerns about lagging productivity in Canada are the main focus of our submission.
In terms of competitiveness, the World Economic Forum says we have slipped three spots on the global scale to number sixteen. Canada used to rank third among OECD countries; today we're seventeenth.
Our productivity growth has lagged behind our main trading partner, the United States, since the 1980s. Here in Ontario, our manufacturing heartland, we lag our peer states in the U.S. by a significant margin. Our GDP per capita is 12% below the median of our peers, 30% behind the leader. Quebec does even worse. In both cases, the primary cause of this prosperity gap is the difference in GDP per capita between Canadian and American jurisdictions.
The sector makes an extraordinary impact and contribution to the nation's economy and to the well-being of individual Canadians. The sector, especially the financial cluster that has developed here in Ontario, presents a unique opportunity to support the productivity agenda of the federal government. Many of our members are among Canada's strongest, most internationally competitive institutions, with great potential to be Canadian-based global enterprises that can generate significant benefits for Canadians and our economy. For that to be the case, these firms, however, must have a local economic environment that can support that growth through competitive tax and regulatory policies. We have mentioned several initiatives in our submission to deal with this.
We support the government's spending reduction and expenditure management approach in paying down debt and the fiscal flexibility that this will provide the government. If program spending had been limited to 4%, which would have covered inflation plus population growth, there would have been a $25 billion fiscal room picture for this year, and that could have helped finance any number of productive tax reductions across the board: personal income, corporate income tax rates, etc.
A major drag on our productivity is, of course, the capital tax. The C.D. Howe Institute, which you will be hearing from later today, has been very clear in its research about the negative impact of that on our productivity. I don't propose to go into more of that, because I suspect we'll hear more from the institute on that, but we hope the federal government will address these concerns and also use its influence with provinces to have them reform their tax systems as well.
Specifically, we mention reducing general corporate income tax on a faster scale, eliminating the corporate surtax, capital tax, and the part VI capital tax on financial institutions as quickly as is feasible.
We also support good, strong securities regulation, and we commend the committee for its work on this. Supporting a common regulator would encourage them to continue to do that, because we generally like the model put forward by the Crawford Panel.
As a final word, we also believe that a city agenda is extremely important, as our financial institutions tend to be headquartered here, where they gather in clusters and benefit, one from the other, from that proximity.
Making our cities work and making them attractive places to live will encourage retention of the skilled workforce. One of the major ways to do that is dealing with infrastructure and the problems of congestion. We strongly recommend that the federal government and the provinces use greater involvement of our private sector with public-private partnerships to do that.
In closing, Mr. Chair, let me stress that the issues we are discussing today need a long-term economic view that sets out a national economic plan encouraging productivity and economic growth, because we will all benefit from that.
Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.