Thank you Mr. Brison. I would also like to thank the committee for having invited us this evening.
When I appeared before you to speak on behalf of Imagine Canada during the pre-budget consultations, I said that we had to change the way we think about the charitable sector's contribution to Canada and to the whole world. Charitable and not-for-profit organizations employ two million Canadians, represent more than 7% of GDP, and involve 13 million volunteers. We create jobs, we stimulate economic growth, and nine out of ten Canadians believe that charitable organizations are an essential part of our quality of life.
It is in that context that we would like to speak to one part of Bill C-4, that is the enhancement and extension of the Hiring Credit for Small Business.
As committee members are aware, the hiring credit for small business would provide a rebate of up to $1,000 to eligible employers whose EI contributions increase from one year to the next. Despite the name of this initiative, this provision is available to all small employers including those in the non-profit sector. This initiative is most welcome and yet reinforces my point about changing our mindset.
When the credit was announced in the 2011 federal budget, given its labelling, charities unfortunately did not take note immediately. It was only when Imagine Canada made inquiries months later that we learned, albeit happily, that it applied to our sector as well.
We appreciate that the credit was designed and implemented without discriminating between for-profit and not-for-profit employers. Greater clarity, however, about its applicability to our sector would have enabled the government to recognize more publicly its support for charities and non-profit organizations' roles as employers. In a climate where every dollar counts, greater clarity would also have enabled organizations to make payroll decisions with the immediate knowledge that the credit applied to them.
For policies aimed at promoting jobs and growth to achieve their full potential, we need to make sure not only that they are inclusive, as was done in this case, and most appreciated, but also that they are described and marketed accordingly.
Using the most recent information available to us on staffing and payroll costs, we've assessed the potential impact of the renewed and extended hiring credit for charities. Based on the level of employer contributions paid in 2011, we estimate that almost 40,000 charities could benefit from the hiring credit included in Bill C-4. This represents almost 90% of all the charities that have paid staff. That's 40,000 charities in every community in Canada that will find it a little easier to meet their payroll obligations if they, for example, turn a part-time job into a full-time job, take on new staff, or provide staff increases.
While this is not a magic bullet for charities, it does suggest how government can, through instruments at its disposal and programs already in place, add another plank to its support for charities as engines of economic and social prosperity.
In addition, charities will continue to pursue earned income activities and access to grants and contributions and to depend on the generosity of Canadians supported by the federal government through tax incentives such as the new super credit and the proposed stretch tax credit.
We encourage the government to extend the sector-neutral approach taken with the hiring credit to other policies aimed at job creation and economic growth.
As I explained in my recent testimony, there are numerous federal initiatives that could help charities expand their earned income activities, and thus their financial sustainability and their ability to create jobs.
We look forward to working together to ensure that federal programs such as the Mitacs-Accelerate program, the Business Development Bank, the Community Futures program, and the industrial research assistance program, to name just a few, could assist charities as employers and social entrepreneurs, and that they be fully and unambiguously open to them.
Addressing this issue across all government programs would further reinforce the positive support provided the hiring credit in Bill C-4.
Mr. Chairman, good people doing good things here in Canada and elsewhere in the world are an important part of the story of charitable organizations, but the story is much more than that. The story is about jobs that we create throughout the country, about the economic activity and opportunities that we create, and the enormous and positive impact that we have on quality of life. In short, it is a story about building a stronger Canada and working with Canadians, the private sector and all levels of government to achieve that.
I would like to thank you for this initiative that goes in the right direction and maximizes the contribution of charitable organizations.