Mr. Chairperson and members of the committee, thank you for inviting me to speak before you today.
I am Kevin Boughen and I'm president of Global Refund Canada Ltd. We are a subsidiary of Global Refund Group, incorporated in the Netherlands. Global Refund Group provides 80% of all tourist tax refunds in the world. Since its inception in 1980, Global Refund Group has grown to a point where we now service 30,000 travellers each and every day. We operate in 37 countries, across four continents.
In 2002, we began facilitating visitor tax refunds here in Canada and currently employ 60 people across the country. Over the past five years, we have invested several million dollars growing our Canadian operation. Today, Global Refund Canada offers instant cash refunds to visitors at all five of Canada's largest airports. We are the largest third party service provider in Canada, with 80% of this market. No other organization has the depth of experience and knowledge we have in this area. We know what makes visitor rebate programs work in all the various countries that offer them. And there are many common elements that distinguish the best-run programs.
What brings me here today is my understanding that government officials recommended that the Canadian program be eliminated because it was expensive to administer and vulnerable to fraud. Rather than eliminate the program, however, we believe there are several simple, easy steps the government can take to solve both of these problems.
Our proposal will accomplish three main things. First, it preserves the value of a visitor tax refund system that stimulates growth in the tourist numbers and stimulates growth in tourist spending. Second, it eliminates the costs for the government that are associated with its operational responsibilities. And third, it will significantly improve the security and minimize fraud.
There are two essential components to our proposal. The first is that the tourist, and not the taxpayers, should fund the system. Today, Canada stands as only one of three OECD countries with a taxpayer-funded visitor rebate program. By changing Canada's model to a user-pay, the government can shift the administrative burden to the GST refund operators, the tourists they serve, and thereby eliminate all its costs in operations.
Under the current system, the tourist can apply for a refund in one of any number of ways.
First, the tourist can apply directly to the government's rebate office in Summerside, P.E.I., and receive 100% of their GST back in six to eight weeks' time. Alternatively, if they're travelling by land, they can stop at a participating duty-free shop and receive 100% of their GST back in Canadian dollars instantly. A third option would be for them to visit a third party, such as Global Refund, at an airport. At the airport, they would receive an instant refund, but it would be discounted by a 20% administration fee. In most OECD countries and in our proposal, the only way a visitor should receive a rebate is by paying an administrative fee at the point of exit.
The second essential element we recommend is to enhance program security. In our view, when it comes to fraud prevention, the current Canadian visitor rebate program lags well behind the best practices used in other countries. Today it is far too easy for people to defraud the system by generating false rebate claims and using phony receipts. To strengthen the integrity of the program, we recommend that Canada take a page from the security playbook used in other OECD countries by adopting simple but important changes to document verification, proof of export, and visitor eligibility.
The most important of these changes is the introduction of secure forms, which are supplied by GST refund operators, provided directly to the visitors at the point of sale by participating retailers and hotels. These forms include security features such as bar codes and serial numbers to enable tracking and to provide an audit trail. Secure forms distributed by merchants offer a level of security that ordinary shopping receipts simply cannot.
Today, more than 230,000 merchants, from Louis Vuitton, to Nike, to Apple, use Global Refund as their facilitator of tax rebates for visiting shoppers. These merchants all provide secure documents required to provide a secure program.
In conclusion, tourism is an export industry. The decision to cancel the program arbitrarily revokes the tourism industry's export status, even though it continues to serve as a significant source of revenue. Singling out the tourism industry as the only export sector required to charge GST is punitive to our already challenged industry.
Our proposal can help revitalize an important tourism program while effectively removing the administrative costs from the government. At the same time, the security of the program is enhanced significantly to meet the standards set by other OECD countries. In addition to these important features, the program changes we are recommending would result in a significant increase in the visitor refunds being spent and cycled in the Canadian economy at the point of exit.
We ask the government to accept our recommendations and preserve the program.
Thank you.