Thank you, Mr. Chair.
I want to thank all the witnesses for being with us today.
I can't tell you how happy I am to meet you and to see that the Standing Committee on Finance is undertaking a study on this issue. I had the pleasure of working on this file with my Bloc Québécois and NDP colleagues as well as with my Liberal colleagues. We worked hard to make sure that the committee would look at this issue.
If I've understood correctly what everyone is saying, the phenomenon of self-employed workers or entrepreneurs is nothing new or temporary. It will continue and will continue to grow.
Mr. Fahey provided data to the committee, on behalf of his association. Unfortunately, I don't have the English version. On page 4, it reads as follows:
In fact, Canada has seen significant growth in self-employment over the last couple of decades, especially among those who incorporated. The 2006 census shows that while there was an 8.5% increase in employees between 2001 and 2006, there was an 18.6% increase in the incorporated self-employed during the same period.
If we look at data that has come out since the beginning of the recession, we note that there are even more people looking for entrepreneurial work.
I'm going to read something to you and I'm going to ask what you think. This is a motion that I gave notice of already in the House. I won't read it in full, because it takes up a full page.
(a) amending subsection 125(7) of the Income Tax Act to include a provision under which a business would not be defined as a "personal services business" if there were a clear "supplier-client" service contract in effect rather than an "employee-employer" contract, regardless of the number of workers employed by the supplier; (b) to amend the Income Tax Act to define a "supplier-client" service contract as one that (i) describes a specific deliverable that the supplier is to provide to the client and stipulates that under no circumstances do the parties intend to establish an employer-employee relationship, (ii) stipulates that neither party may have access to benefits provided by the other's human resources unit, including employee benefits, promotions, training, and career planning;
It goes on to read: "[to establish] a separate tax rate", etc.
I'm going to ask the committee members for permission to distribute this document—it is bilingual—to everyone, including the witnesses.
I know that you haven't seen everything. However, do you think this is something that the government should look at, in consultation with all the stakeholders, in order to see if this might be a solution?This is the 21st century after all.