Thank you so much. Thank you to the honourable members for inviting Startup Canada and Canada's entrepreneurs to the table today.
Startup Canada is the national rallying brand, community, and voice for Canada's 2.3 million entrepreneurs. Since I launched it as a social entrepreneur, along with my co-founder, in 2012, Startup Canada has grown to represent more than 200,000 entrepreneurs across Canada and across 50 grassroots start-up communities that volunteer-led and entrepreneur-run from coast to coast to coast.
We represent the diversity of Canada's entrepreneurial community. It's so cool that I'm here beside Molson Coors, a great Canadian success story. Many of my members wish they could be so successful one day. We represent women, indigenous persons, mompreneurs, and hackers in their basements. We represent farmers. We represent every Canadian entrepreneur.
We work in the best interests of every entrepreneur to foster an inclusive economy and a growing middle class through entrepreneurship. Through digital programs and flagship events, Startup Canada is the network promoting, inspiring, connecting, and giving a voice to Canada's entrepreneurs, supporting their start, operation, and scaling up of their businesses to build a better Canada.
Our entrepreneurs are among our economy's most important natural resources for the future. Canada is home to 2.3 million entrepreneurs and 1.1 million small businesses, accounting for 78% of private sector job creation in Canada, 30% of exports, and 27% percent of GDP. More than 8.2 million Canadians work for small businesses in Canada.
From my comments, I want you to really understand that the world is competing for this natural resource and the rest of the world is vying for this talent. They're vying for the investments and their share of international markets. What we need to do is to really build a Canada in which our entrepreneurs can flourish, and to keep them here in Canada. We believe that being fair and competitive are not mutually exclusive.
From the recent tax consultations on changing the taxation of entrepreneurs, we have never felt more concern among our community than now, and certainly every member of Parliament who has met with their small business community has felt this. There has never been such an outcry before as when we started to look at our tax system and talk about fairness and our entrepreneurs. That was an opportunity for a conversation, which our entrepreneurs had with members of Parliament across the government.
As we're building tax policy and looking at Bill C-63 in all respects, we need to ensure that we do not inhibit entrepreneurial ambition in our country but that we are our entrepreneurs and demonstrating that Canada is behind our dairy farmers, our Molson Coors', and every entrepreneur. We need to recognize and acknowledge the risk that entrepreneurs take on personally, financially, and professionally when they start a company. We need to increase incentives for Canadians to participate in our entrepreneurial economy, as angel investors and through crowdfunding platforms to unleash entrepreneurial capital. We need to ensure that there are no unintended consequences in supporting the succession or transfer of businesses across generations, or any other unintended consequences, as we look to modernize and create a fairer Canada.
Rather than looking to see where we can tax more, our goal ought to be to grow our entrepreneurial tax base and unleash the entrepreneurial potential of every Canadian.
We have seen the difference that has resulted when entrepreneurs and government work together. Through consultations, we saw the Government of Canada begin to step back and recognize that there were unintended consequences for entrepreneurs in some of the proposed tax reforms. We also saw a recognition of the value of entrepreneurs with the reduction of the corporate tax rate. When we work together, we can create a better Canada for entrepreneurs, as we've shown in the last few months. We're really excited about the possibilities for the future.
In closing, we believe that the government, as it relates to entrepreneurs, can provide the best possible environment and culture for entrepreneurship. In Canada, this is our opportunity today.
There are six things that we can do and that we ask the finance committee to consider as you're looking forward to building our economy.
We need to continue to reduce red tape for every entrepreneur. There is more red tape in this binder here. We need to relentlessly reduce red tape.
We need to make it easy for entrepreneurs to understand and access government services and support. Here in this binder, once again, we're talking about changes to the labour tax code. We're talking about changes to the GST and HST. We need to educate our entrepreneurs on the impact these changes will have on their businesses. We need to ensure that we're making it easy for entrepreneurs to understand what's happening and to plan for the future.
We also need to ensure that we have the best possible tax environment to provide incentives for entrepreneurial growth. As I mentioned, this is through unleashing innovative capital solutions to seed our economy of the future. We need to ensure that every analysis of Bill C-63 takes into account the impact on Canada's entrepreneurs and their ability to create jobs and invest in each other. Whether it be amendments to the Income Tax Act related to legislation that closes loopholes around capital gains exemptions or ensuring that our farmers and fishers are eligible for the small business deduction, we really need to ensure that our tax environment is conducive to entrepreneurial growth.
Moreover, we need to continue to improve domestic and international market access and access to international capital. How will the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank help us to expand trade links with China and investment between Chinese investors and businesses and our entrepreneurs? How are we looking at this investment in regional consolidation and regional collaboration as an investment in our small businesses? How are we ensuring that qualifying farmers and fishers are eligible for the small business tax deduction?
In addition to opening up new markets and capital, we really recommend that the Government of Canada work with entrepreneur support organizations like Startup Canada and other industry partners to continue the dialogue and conversation. It's only by working together that we can identify that there are implications for entrepreneurs from many of the aspects of Bill C-63. It's our opportunity as a nation to shine as an entrepreneurial nation.
Thank you so much for the opportunity to bring entrepreneurs to the table. We look forward to taking your questions.