Thank you, sir.
My next question is for Corinne.
You spoke about about childhood obesity. I think everybody on the panel agrees that more should be done to target childhood obesity, but you had a specific emphasis on the sugar tax.
I've studied this issue more than most MPs. I used to work at Pepsi as my first job after I graduated as a financial analyst. I get more passionate than most people on why I don't believe a sugar tax is a good idea, but I'd like to have a conversation on it with you.
The WHO and the Heart and Stroke Foundation recommend a sugar tax. They believe if we have a sugar tax we will consume less sugar, which will add more benefits to our society: people will live longer, will be healthier, etc.
However, wherever there's been a sugar tax implemented, there hasn't been a direct correlation in a reduction in childhood obesity. In Canada, there's actually a reduction in the consumption of sugary drinks already without a sugar tax and then we don't even get to the notional argument, which I brought up with the Heart and Stroke Foundation last year when they testified in front of this committee recommending a sugar tax, which is that nobody has done an economic analysis on the job losses that would be created with the implementation of a sugar tax. The economic reality is that if you tax a Coca-Cola or a Pepsi, they're going to have to meet their bottom line somehow, and that generally means a reduction in labour force.
I'm also biased because Coca-Cola's biggest plant is in Brampton, and this would have a negative impact on their business.