Thanks, Mr. Chair, and thanks, Mr. Siddall and Ms. Bowers, for being here today.
We certainly hope that your families are safe and healthy.
I have two questions to start, around the IMPP. Economist David Macdonald estimated that in the previous financial crisis around 2009, the IMPP provided $69 million of support to Canada's largest banks. At the time, the profits coming out of those same banks were about $27 billion. Famously, Edmund Clark of the TD bank gave himself a $4-million bonus and was paid $15 million.
The issue comes up, of course, in my hometown, New Westminster—Burnaby, where people are struggling to find affordable housing. They see the near-zero interest rate from the Bank of Canada. They see as well that when it comes to deferrals, these often come with penalties and interest fees.
I have two questions. First, what is the amount assumed so far on the IMPP? Second, have you insisted in this program that banks lower their interest rates—we see credit unions going down to zero—that the banks actually give people a break, eliminate the fees and penalties, and don't engage in what is speculative with this public support, which includes the payment of dividends and stock buybacks? Has there been any insistence through this program that the banks not engage in those kinds of practices?