Thank you very much, Mr. Chair, and thank you to the entire committee for inviting me here. It's a pleasure to be here, and of course, it's my honour to appear before you for the first time as Minister of Finance. I want to thank you for your work not only in keeping the government to account, but in ensuring that Canadians are heard throughout the parliamentary process.
As you know, we're four weeks away from budget day. I'll have a great deal more to say on March 22 regarding the details of our plan for investing in the middle class to grow the economy, but I didn't want to miss the opportunity to be with you today as we begin committee proceedings under a new Parliament and a new government. Yesterday, in a pre-budget town hall here in Ottawa, I reconfirmed that our government is taking a fundamentally different approach to managing the economy, and I'm pleased to have the opportunity to take some time this morning to reiterate that here.
After 10 years of weak growth, Canadians chose a new path to economic growth. They chose investment. They chose a government committed to helping the middle class. Canadians told us that they want inclusive growth, meaning that no one is left behind. I'm pleased to be here today to talk more about that commitment and to share with you what we've heard from Canadians during our pre-budget consultations.
One of the most telling things that I've heard as I've travelled across the country during my pre-budget consultations is that people really do see the big picture. They know that oil prices have contributed to the fall of the dollar and to things like higher food prices, and of course they're worried. But they also know that the recent downturn is really just a symptom of what many of us have been feeling for a long time now. The economy is just not working for the middle class and those people who are working hard to join it.
Over the last four decades, almost every group in our society has seen their income go up, but when you look carefully at the numbers, you see that the top 1% and the top 0.1% have benefited much more from the gains than have the middle class. We know that income inequality is an even greater challenge in times of significant economic stress.
I can tell you that when the Prime Minister appointed me as finance minister, he instructed me to undertake an ambitious growth agenda, a plan that I believe to be even more important in light of the revised growth projections that we released yesterday.
Yesterday, we confirmed what Canadians already know. Since we presented the economic update in the fall, Canada's growth perspectives have deteriorated. The prices of the commodities Canada produces continue to drop, and the recovery of the global economy is weak and hesitant. After ten years of weak growth, the Canadian economy was too vulnerable, faced with the conjunction of the drop in oil prices and global economic uncertainty. Given the current economic situation, Canadians made the right choice by placing their confidence in us.
Barely eleven days ago, I met with private sector economists who expect the price of oil to average US$40 a barrel in 2016, which is $14 less per barrel than expected at the time of the fall economic update.
The economists also lowered their growth rate forecast for 2016 from 2% to 1.4%. At the end of the last year Canada's economy showed little vigour, and this seems to be continuing in 2016. This downturn has a real impact on many families, as well as on government revenues.
We are aware that many Canadians are facing particular problems because of the recent economic slowdown, especially in regions such as Alberta, Newfoundland and Labrador and Saskatchewan.
In fact, I was happy to confirm this morning that Alberta has qualified for $251 million in stabilization funding. I was pleased to work directly with Minister Ceci for the benefit of Albertan families who I know are going through a particularly challenging time.
I want to thank the members of our Alberta caucus, including Minister Hehr and Minister Sohi for their tireless advocacy for their province.
There is no doubt that the time has come to chart a new course and adopt a fundamentally different approach in our economic and budgetary policies.
When it's presented four weeks from today, budget 2016 will be the first major step in enacting our new direction and plan. In other words, in addition to bringing in measures that will address the challenges Canadian families face today, budget 2016 will create conditions for growth. There will be more to do.
Over the coming months, the government will develop a robust growth strategy designed to deliver strong and sustainable growth that will benefit us all and higher living standards for all Canadians. It will deliver the strategy to Canadians before year-end.
In support of that strategy, I announced yesterday that Dominic Barton has accepted to lead the new advisory council on economic growth. Their first job will be to find ways to increase our productivity so that as our demographics shift, we nonetheless continue to enjoy the highest possible standard of living. This is long overdue.
To members of the opposition who have been less than fully supportive of our plan, I invite you to consider the alternative. The other parties, who committed during the last election campaign to a balanced budget at any cost approach, would be making cuts of tens of billions of dollars at precisely the wrong time. This would have led to massive job losses in a time of already high unemployment. This would have led to program cuts at a time when regions and population segments need those programs most. To be frank, this likely would have led us into another recession.
Our philosophy is simple. We want to focus on the middle class and help those who are working to join it, help those who are most in need, and make judicious investments in roads, bridges and public transit that will create jobs and help us get to work faster, transport our products further, and make our communities more ecologically sound.
We have already taken the first steps this year by lowering income taxes for 9 million Canadians. By the same token, we asked those who make more to pay a bit more.
We also took steps to help young Canadians by investing up to $113 million more in the Canada summer jobs program. That investment will help our young people to gain the valuable work experience they need. It will also help to create 35,000 additional summer jobs for students this year.
In addition, we announced plans to create a new, simpler and more generous Canada child benefit. It will help 9 families out of 10 and will take hundreds of thousands of children out of poverty. We expect this benefit to reduce the proportion of children in Canada who live in low-income families to a threshold which will be below the average for the member countries of the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development. Reducing child poverty will bear fruit later. This will put children on the path to success throughout their lives, while placing Canada on the road to growth.
We will also make targeted and judicious investments in infrastructure, not only for short term gain, but also to ensure that the government plays its role in supporting businesses that need access to markets, increased productivity and sustained economic growth over the long term.
Making strategic investments in growth right now is the fair and reasonable thing to do, especially as we have the lowest debt-to-GDP ratio among G7 countries. That means we have the fiscal flexibility to support measures to invest in infrastructure that will help economic growth and create opportunities for future generations without overburdening them with debt.
Mr. Chair, I am pleased that the committee has given itself an ambitious program to improve the lives of Canadians and mobilize them so that they participate in discussions on the measures the government wants to take to contribute to economic growth and support the middle class and those who would like to join it.
I know that the committee has a large quantity of information to sort. I will thus limit myself to a summary of this year's consultations.
From the beginning of the pre-budget consultations on January 6, our objective was clear: we wanted to consult as many Canadian men and women as possible, in a spirit of renewed cooperation and unprecedented transparency. We launched those consultations with an enthusiasm that was well received and equalled by Canadians, both in person and online. In fact, the Department of Finance received a record number of presentations and comments. The rate of participation in pre-budget consultations was the highest in history.
Our first consultation meeting was with students from eight Canadian universities, through Google Hangouts. Parliamentary Secretary François-Philippe Champagne and myself then did a whirlwind tour of the country, from one end to the other. That tour began on January 11 in Halifax. In the subsequent six days, I went to Montreal, Toronto, Winnipeg and Calgary, and then concluded the tour in Vancouver and Surrey. In addition, François-Philippe went to Moncton, Quebec City, Trois-Rivières, Sault Ste. Marie, Saskatoon, Edmonton and Yellowknife.
As of today, François-Philippe and I have conducted 21 separate round tables, meetings, chats, and panels. That's not counting the many local meetings with MPs from both sides of the floor held in their ridings. Let's not forget the Facebook live events that were held in Halifax, Calgary, and yesterday in Ottawa, where tens of thousands of Canadians tuned in, asked questions, and gave me some very good advice on growing the economy. In fact, over the course of the consultation, we've reached well over 200,000 Canadians. While the numbers are impressive, they all add up to the same thing: engaging with Canadians in a way that had not previously been attempted.
I believe that the clerk has shared with committee members the reports from my pre-budget consultations, and I hope that they're useful to you in your work. With the consent of the committee, I'd also like to table the over 4,000 pre-budget submissions Canadians have made online. The comments and views included in these submissions are unedited and unfiltered; they were not vetted by my office or my department. Due to the volume of the submissions, they're presented in source language, untranslated. Mr. Chair, if there's consent, I have a USB key for each of the committee members here containing these submissions.