Thank you, Mr. Chair.
My name is Audrey Azoulay. I am the Director of Research and Government Relations for the Manufacturiers et Exportateurs du Quebec. I thank the committee for being willing to listen to our organizations's recommendations during these consultations.
Before listing our recommendations, I would like to make two comments. The first is specifically about the manufacturing sector. Mr. Chair, it has been a long time since we have seen a real resurgence in activity in the manufacturing sector. We have been able to discern some cyclical upswings, but nothing that has shielded us from the downward trend in employment. Depending on the sector and the company, there has at times been very good investment news, but, on the whole, investment is not going up. This fact has a number of causes. Of course, there is the performance of the Canadian dollar over the last 10 years. There is also the intense competition from developing countries in particular, and likely a number of others. Whatever the reasons may be, it is vital to boost manufacturing. Here in Quebec, we call it a manufacturing priority. I would like to highlight this because the priority is important to grasp. In that light, I will quickly go over some of the arguments.
Let us start with the manufacturing sector. We must count on it if our trade balance is to improve. In Quebec specifically, we are really in the red. In our view, if we continue along the same lines, we will run into imbalances on a macroeconomic scale that will not be tenable.
In addition, research and development activity, the value we get from them and the bringing to market of highly value-added products is clearly built on a solid manufacturing sector.
Another argument is that the primary source of increased productivity in our economy lies in manufacturing activity. The argument is supported by figures.
The development of the natural resources we have in abundance must be supported by the manufacturing sector, where, of course, their true value lies.
Finally, very many quality jobs in the service sector depend, as do those in manufacturing itself, on a strong manufacturing sector.
In general terms, the manufacturing sector makes up a fifth or a sixth of the economy of Quebec, as it does for the economy of Canada. This sector must be considered the key to wealth creation and it must be strengthened. We really cannot wait any longer.
I would like to stress that, with our demographics and with the world economy in my view becoming unstable by nature, we cannot afford to lose a single point of economic growth. In recent years, and despite ever-tighter budgets, the federal government has continued to build economic growth in Canada using measures that we have supported and that we still support. These are the lowering of income tax, the two-year accelerated capital cost allowance, the elimination of tariffs on imported machinery, and the incentives associated with the harmonized sales tax in some provinces.
All these measures were positive for the manufacturing sector. We think this course should be maintained and that on-going attention should be paid to the corporate tax structure. Certainly, we must not stop now. We are not opposed to the sustainable rationalization of public finances. In fact, it seems necessary in the context of a globalization where it is certainly not the first time that our competitiveness has been called into question.
We have three recommendations in the area of taxation. First, we think that the two-year accelerated capital cost allowance on the import of manufacturing and processing equipment should be made permanent. Among other things, this fits logically with the speed at which technology is evolving today.
Our second recommendation is that the research and development tax credit be reimbursable. Mr. Chair, research and development is an extremely risky investment, whose results will likely not be seen for a very long time. Cash flow really is necessary to encourage research and development in a visible and tangible manner.
The third recommendation is intrinsically linked to the first two. True investment does not exist without investment in human capital. They go together and they must be considered together. We recommend that the government encourage employee training to a greater extent using a tax credit that would be applied against employment insurance premiums.
We feel that this recommendation has considerable merit: the more training people receive, it follows that the less employment insurance they need.
I will conclude by saying that, as a general principle, to reduce social charges on the payroll is also to reduce a fixed and regressive tax on human capital. We are strongly committed to our third recommendation.