Good afternoon, and thank you very much for appearing today. I want to start by apologizing. I had a speech in the House on the old age security issue today. I would have been here earlier.
I really appreciate the onus and the insight that you've provided to the committee, which will no doubt help guide our deliberations.
I want to start with a quick question. We met with Department of Finance officials earlier this week, and they were discussing the issue of a term of tax expenditure, which they use to describe what they perceive to be a cost as a result of a tax change or a tax benefit that leads to charitable giving. They had attributed, I think in 2011, $36 million as a cost of the exemption of capital gains tax on gifts of publicly listed securities.
I'd appreciate your input on this, because their assumption is based on—and I'll give you an example—somebody giving $100,000 in gifts of publicly listed securities. If you were to calculate, depending on inclusion rate, depending on their tax bracket, say, a $20,000 capital gains tax that would have been paid had there not been the exemption of capital gains tax on gifts of publicly listed securities.... The Department of Finance looks at that and says that's a tax expenditure. That cost us money. It's like a line item in the budget. I was looking at that and thinking, well, that's assuming the contribution would have occurred in any case notwithstanding, and my feeling is that in a lot of cases it wouldn't happen. Capital gains tax kind of locks up capital, and the tendency is to hold on to it, and you may never divest yourself of it, or it might be something that's so far into the future that it's hard to put a cost on that.
So is it accurate to say that the $36 million figure that the Department of Finance applies as a tax expenditure for this is a bit of a specious or at least questionable figure in terms of actual cost to the government?