Thank you.
On behalf of the 3.3 million members of the Canadian Labour Congress, we want to thank you for the opportunity to present our views on the 2013 federal budget. As you know, the CLC brings together workers from virtually all sectors of the Canadian economy in all occupations in all parts of Canada.
Leading economists, including bank economists, say that Canada's economic recovery is stalling due to slow business investment, high household debt, and weak global growth. Business investments are not where they should be. The across-the-board corporate tax cut didn't deliver the promised investments in real assets, such as new factories and workers' training. Thus, these cuts failed to boost economic growth and productivity and didn't help create more and better jobs in Canada. Instead, those corporate tax cuts delivered high compensation to CEOs, cost Canadians billions in lower than expected government revenues, led to higher federal debt and deficit, and led to cuts in public services. However, those across-the-board corporate tax cuts have helped private non-financial corporations in Canada hoard over $500 billion in cash reserves, money that is not working to create better jobs and more jobs in Canada.
To compensate for the lack of investment from corporations, we need a major public investment program to create good jobs now in Canada, promote our environmental growth, stimulate new private sector investment, and boost productivity. The CLC calls for the federal government to launch, in partnership with provinces and cities, a major multi-year public investment program. The program should include an increase in support for things such as basic municipal infrastructure, mass transit and passenger rail, affordable housing, quality affordable child care, energy conservation through building retrofits, and renewable energy projects.
The CLC supports targeted measures to support and create good jobs in manufacturing and to maximize job creation in industries linked to the resource sector. This will require government strategies on trade, sectoral development, and domestic procurement strategies. Encouraging value-added production and investment in key sectors, along with green jobs and green skills initiatives, will enhance innovation and labour productivity. Having sectoral development policies seeking to promote more investment, production, employment, and exports, especially in important sectors of the economy, is key to attaining a more desirable mix of sectors in our economy.
Also, we cannot afford trade investment that gives priority to investors' rights over the rights of workers and their aspirations for decent work and decent lives. We need a new international trade and investment framework that has, at its core, the promotion of high labour standards and collective bargaining, high job quality, and sustainable global economic development.
Also, Canada's economic success and the future prosperity of every Canadian will depend on the capacity and capabilities of a skilled and educated workforce. While there is much talk on future skills shortages, Statistics Canada reports that there are more than five unemployed workers for every job vacancy in Canada. Training and lifelong learning are critical, and literacy and numeracy skills in Canada lag behind those in many other countries. Training Canadians instead of importing vulnerable migrant labour should be a top priority. The CLC calls for the development of a national tripartite skills development strategy in response to the growing skills gap, the aging workforce, and the specific needs of groups such as aboriginals, recent immigrants, and youth.
Finally, some of our key federal programs do not match today's reality. Only 37% of unemployed Canadians receive EI benefits. The CLC calls on the government to implement a uniform national entrance requirement of 360 hours, increase the benefits level from 55% to 60%, and base benefit and duration calculations on the 30-hour workweek.
The CLC continues to call for a doubling of future CPP benefits phased in on a fully pre-funded basis, and we welcome the support given to the CPP expansion by Ontario and many other provinces.
We call on the federal government and all provincial governments to pursue this option as an urgent priority.