Colleagues and members of the finance committee, I know you work very hard, and I appreciate what you do.
The consultations you do matter a lot in terms of the formulation of each year's budget, so I thank all of you for that. I know that you travel a lot and you're away from your families and it's not easy, so I thank all of you for that.
My officials are here tonight in case you ask anything complicated. They will attempt to deal with it.
I would like to thank the committee for its work on the pre-budget consultations.
The committee's pre-budget consultations are a key part of the budget process. Your recommendations inform the budget, and that's for real, because you can go back and look at the budgets over the last six or seven years and see a lot of recommendations that were in the report of this committee over those years.
For the budget this year, this included
ensuring the fairness and impartiality of the tax system while continuing to eliminate loopholes
— which is about tax loopholes; and enhancing the neutrality of the tax system by eliminating inefficient fossil fuel subsidies consistent with our G-20 commitments. I should add that we have eliminated all of the tax subsidies that once existed for the oil sands, and for those who think otherwise, they ought to check the record. We are trying to enhance the neutrality of the tax system by eliminating inefficient fossil fuel subsidies. This is consistent with our commitments in the G-20.
We are reviewing legislation and regulations to ensure the safety and security of our financial sector and modernizing Canada's immigration system to better focus on lever market needs. Let me provide some context to this. When we became the government in January, February 2006, what was there to worry about economically? Well, the Prime Minister and I thought perhaps the United States because they're running large deficits and accumulating significant public debt. So how do we protect Canada? My view was that we pay down public debt, which we did. We paid down about $38 billion of public debt in the first couple of years that we were the government. And then the great recession happened, but it didn't start there, as you know. It started with a credit crisis and then it moved into a crisis in the real economy. Then we had to make a choice about what were we going to do: continue to try to balance or give it up. And what we decided to do was to run a very large deficit of almost $58 billion in January 2009. But the plan always was to get back to balance in the medium term, and we're almost there.
In 2015-16, the budget will be balanced. I think it's important for business confidence in Canada. At the same time—and others have different points of view on this—I think it was very important that we spent that money, borrowed the money and spent it in 2009. And I give the public officials a lot of credit at Treasury Board, Infrastructure, Transportation, and Finance for getting the money out the door because that was the danger. The danger was millions of people unemployed and a long, deep, dark recession.
We can always look back and say that it didn't turn out that way, but we did some things that it helped it not turn out that way. And our plan worked, unlike some of our colleagues in the G-7 who are still struggling.
Moody says, and all the rest of them say, that we have the only economy that has created over a million net new jobs since the depth of the recession. We have, of course, a triple-A credit rating, and now there are only a handful of countries in the entire world that have a triple-A credit rating, which is regrettable.
The World Economic Forum for the sixth straight year has ranked Canada's banking system the soundest in the world.
The International Monetary Fund and the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development have forecasted that Canada will have the strongest growth of the G7 members over the coming years.
Now, this is not huge growth, and I don't sit here and say to people who are knowledgeable, like the members of the House finance committee, that things are rosy. Things are okay. But we're only growing at 1.8% or 2%, or a little bit better than that. The American economy is doing a little bit better now, which is a good thing. The European economy, as you've seen in the most recent statistics, is weakening, which is a concern.
Dealing with deficit and debt, I think the most important thing we can do for our country is to get rid of our deficit, which we will do in 2015-16. In the annual financial report, the deficit fell to $18.9 billion in 2012-13. This is nearly $7 billion less than projected. And that's down more than one quarter from the deficit of $26.3 billion in 2011-12, and down by nearly two-thirds from the $55.6 billion deficit recorded in 2009-10.
A lot of this has to do with the way we spend. I won't go on too long, Mr. Chair, but as you know there are three major areas of spending federally. One is transfers to the provinces. We have not reduced transfers to the provinces. We have maintained the 6% health transfer. We have maintained the 3% Canada social transfer. We've stuck to it—even during the bad times. And then with the transfers to individuals, persons with disabilities, seniors, and so on, we have continued at the same level of funding. We've also continued the same level of funding for research, development, our granting councils, the money we give to universities, the money we give for post-doctoral fellowships, and all of those things, because they're vitally important for the future of our country.
So where do you save money? You know this from looking at these subjects. You save it by looking at your own program spending, which we have done, and which we have tightened. The result of all of that is that we have a situation now in which we can easily balance in 2015-16. I'll spare you some of this other stuff.
I think we're doing some important things in this bill, one of which is to extend the hiring credit. It actually works. We're all members of Parliament. I'm sure you hear it at home. It creates jobs, especially among small—or smaller—entrepreneurial businesses, so that's a good thing. We're increasing and indexing the lifetime capital gains exemption, and this is the first increase since 1988, which was a long time ago. And we're expanding the ACCA, the accelerated capital cost allowance, to further encourage investments in clean energy exploration. We're closing some tax loopholes. We're, again, modernizing the Canada student loans program. We are phasing out—and this is controversial in Quebec—the tax subsidies such as the labour-sponsored venture capital corporations tax credit, which quite frankly is inefficient and was not accomplishing the goal for which it was intended, and was phased out by Ontario about five or six years ago.
So there you are. I will hand the chair back to David Frost.