Yes, exactly. The International Monetary Fund's new research speaks exactly to these risks.
I apologize, Mr. Boulerice, but I'm going to switch to English.
You asked for comments. I started advocating for child care when I was pregnant with my first son. He and his partner just had a child, who is now seven months old, and the only real change.... In fact, the situation is much worse, but the only good thing is that between my son and his partner they have 12 months of parental leave and, fortunately, they have access to parental EI benefits. Unfortunately, that's true for only a minority of parents who have access to that. They have been on a waiting list for a child care space in Ottawa. Again, his partner did exactly what I did: I got my name on a waiting list as soon as I was pregnant. They are now number 8,212, I think, on the waiting list.
There's not enough space. It's unaffordable. It's particularly unavailable for infant children. I was really glad to hear the presentation from the March of Dimes. Children with disabilities are almost completely excluded. Parents who have disabilities have trouble affording and accessing it. It's so frustrating. You talk about being on the backbenches and not being listened to by government. Well, we have been advocating for this for decades.
Fifty years ago the Royal Commission on the Status of Women said that you have to build a child care system that's affordable and accessible if you want women in the workforce and you want women to enjoy economic security. We have a Liberal government that has put the issue on the agenda, but not enough. I'm really afraid that what they've done is to say they've checked the box, because they gave essentially $500 million in funding for 13 jurisdictions for one year, and that's not going to increase very much for 11 more years.
Let me remind you that in 2005, the last time we had a Liberal government, they promised $1 billion in current dollars in 2005, annually, so we're really moving backward, not forward. It's a detriment to women's participation in the workforce, and it's a real detriment to the economy.
If the IMF researchers, the IMF of all institutions, are saying that if Canada wants to grow its economy, get women to participate in the labour force in equal numbers, provide the child care and other support.... What's interesting in the IMF report.... We hear a lot about the investment in the child tax benefit, and we congratulate the government for that investment. It's hugely important in addressing poverty among families and children. But what's happening is that because the cost of child care has increased, the child care benefit is even becoming a disincentive. What parents have to calculate is exactly what you said. What am I going to earn? What's the cost of child care? One of the things that gets taken away, if you have access to child care tax benefits, is potentially your access to a subsidy.
You have to do the whole thing. If you want increased participation, you have to do it. We've asked for this. Listen to us, please. You haven't done enough. You're on the right track. Engage the child care sector in the consultations. We have been completely excluded in the development of a multilateral framework agreement. We think that's one of the reasons that it's not meeting the objectives it should.