Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Ladies and gentlemen of the committee, thank you for inviting us here this lovely sunny afternoon. It is a pleasure to spend the afternoon with you.
I am here to present Fondaction CSN, which was created in 1995 by enabling legislation of Quebec's National Assembly. The fund began operations in 1996 and it is now the second largest labour-sponsored fund in Canada.
Our mission is to promote economic and sustainable development, to create and retain quality jobs, and to encourage retirement savings, of course. I want to emphasize how important it is that the tax credits afforded to Fondaction shareholders have been completely restored.
We are an innovative financial institution. Since our inception, we have established the strictest governance and transparency requirements, and we have met these requirements for 10 years. We produce sustainable development reports consistent with the exhaustive criteria of the Global Reporting Initiative. We were the first financial institution to do so.
Our institution subscribes to the principles of responsible investment. Since 2007, we have been members of the United Nations Global Compact relating to the various principles for the attainment of millennium development goals.
Our goal is to focus increasingly on social impacts. When we invest in companies, we look not only at economic development. We also analyze the socio-economic impacts, and socio-economic training is given to the various companies we invest in.
Sustainable development has always been at the heart of our mission. We have decided not to choose among social, environmental and economic development, but rather to support all three at the same time.
Our business is very profitable to the government. A study released on May 31, 2015, of which you will soon receive a copy, shows that the tax and tax-related revenues directly attributable to Fondaction, relative to the cost of the tax credits, benefit all Canadians. The study shows a cost-benefit ratio of $1.08 for each dollar spent. So the impact is positive. We came up with a ranking in this regard: the ones we invest in and in which we are are the only ones who can invest, those in which other partners could invest, and those in which all businesses could invest.
We maintain and create jobs, over 30,000 for our entire portfolio. The various statistics I just mentioned pertain to 150 companies, while our portfolio has 800.
Tax credits enable Fondaction to carry out its primary mission, which is to promote retirement savings and create quality retirement capital.
The average annual income of our shareholders is $48,000. Without Fondaction and without labour-sponsored funds, they would not have access to the retirement savings they currently do. We have 128,000 shareholders, 51.4% of whom are women, and annual dues are $2,840, while the maximum is $5,000. We have shown that most shareholders of Fondaction CSN or of another labour-sponsored fund only have access to retirement savings through the type of vehicle we offer.
Fondaction can offer savings to middle-class retirees thanks to the support provided by federal tax credits. According to data from the Régie des rentes du Québec, in 2012, 47% of workers in Quebec, or nearly two million people, had no pension plan.
Tax credits enable us to achieve our primary mission. We can invest the savings for the long term with venture capital, which benefits SMEs. This enables us to expand, modernize, make acquisitions, merge companies, and, above all, to support business continuity by managing succession and transfer programs.
The elimination of the tax credit would have led to a withdrawal from Fondaction and from venture capital, as well a drop in development capital. Considering the leverage effect, the withdrawal of labour-sponsored funds would have reduced businesses' access to substantial amounts from private investors.
I would like to thank the government for fully restoring these tax credits in the budget.
Thank you, Mr. Chair.