The issue, though, is an important one, and you've considered Mr. Julian's question about the significant tax expenditures. My point is that if you assume that the disposition of the shares or the assets would not have occurred otherwise, you could argue there's no tax expenditure, because there would not have been a tax expenditure in any case, except perhaps 20 years in the future when someone dies and things are passed on to an heir or something. It is important to consider that.
But also, the Department of Finance, when it's considering these tax expenditure arguments, doesn't really consider the leveraging that occurs in terms of the potential benefit. I was reading Neil Reynolds' piece in the Globe and Mail yesterday, which I think you were referring to. The federal reserve in the U.S., in one study indicated that “charitable activities can be accomplished [by the philanthropic] sector...at about one-third less than what the government would have to spend to accomplish the same goals”.
So I think it's really important for us to consider, particularly during tight fiscal times, that these incentives actually create a leveraging effect that actually stretches tax dollars as opposed to taking tax dollars. The Department of Finance simply does not have the mandate to look at it.
Should we as a committee be studying more thoroughly the leveraging effect as part of that cost-benefit analysis?