Thank you, Mr. Chair.
My thanks to the Standing Committee on Finance for inviting us to talk about youth employment this afternoon.
The Confédération des syndicats nationaux is a union organization representing more than 300,000 workers across Canada, mostly in Quebec, but also from coast to coast in the federal public service. Our organization was founded in 1921; at least a quarter of our members are under the age of 30.
We are providing three broad topics for the committee's consideration.
The first topic is that working conditions for youth have been deteriorating for a number of years. The second topic we would like to work on deals with economic and fiscal policies for young workers. The third topic deals with policies to assist young people as they look for a job.
In terms of working conditions for youth in Canada, we are seeing more and atypical, part-time and casual work, more and more placement agencies and more and more disparities in treatment based on employment status and hiring date. In 2006, the Arthurs Report denounced the situation and recommended amending Part III of the Canadian Labour Code. The Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms must also be able to prevent disparities in treatment, specifically on the basis of employment status and hiring date.
In addition, better access to pension plans for all young Canadians implies contributions from employers and a more generous Canada Pension Plan if we want to make it possible for young people to plan their lives rather than doing so on their own when they can.
Finally, the unemployment rate for young workers remains high, especially in the regions.
In terms of economic and fiscal policies, we believe that, given the current situation of budgetary surpluses, Canada should invest in job creation in a major way, particularly in the manufacturing sector, which has lost more than 600,000 jobs in the last decade, especially in Ontario and Quebec.
We therefore call for Investment in a sector that is meaningful for the Canadian economy and that has a huge impact elsewhere. The federal government must be much more active than it is at present in supporting these policies with budgetary measures.
In terms of all the employment support policies, there are a number of partnership agreements with the provinces, certainly with Quebec. We warmly welcome the renewal of the Canada-Quebec labour market agreement that helps tens of thousands, hundreds of thousands of young people, who are neither in school nor working, with study or assistance programs. The assistance goes to client groups that are increasingly difficult to manage. The CSN feels that the government must address these issues.
We respectfully submit seven recommendations to the committee: you will find them in the brief we have provided.
Our first recommendation is to improve and modernize federal labour legislation, including the Canada Labour Code, in order to tackle the problem of discrimination based on employment status that mainly affects young Canadians.
Our second recommendation is to make sure that every employee in Canada has the right to be covered by a pension plan, and therefore to be able to plan for, and have financial security in retirement. Young workers would therefore be able to plan for their retirement rather than to have to resort to voluntary measures.
Our third recommendation is to recognize that the work-life balance should have more than lip service paid to it in the business environment. This balance must come in the form of measures to assist businesses and young workers so that the workers can raise their families, balance their work and their families, and even balance their work, their families and their studies.
Our fourth recommendation is to establish an industrial policy that would, by means of a Canada-wide expansionary fiscal policy, ensure job creation and recover the 600,000 jobs that Canada has lost in the last decade.
Our fifth recommendation is to rebuild an industrial base in Canada that would subsequently be able to support the service sector.
Our sixth recommendation is to manage employability measures to allow the youth employment market to develop, respecting all federal and provincial jurisdictions.
Our seventh and final recommendation is to give provinces the right to opt out if they wish when no agreement is in place.
Those are the recommendations that the CSN has for the committee. We support this initiative in analyzing the youth employment situation and we ask for the committee's support for the initiatives we are proposing.