Thank you, Mr. Chair.
I would like to begin by acknowledging and thanking each and every representative from each of the departments for being here. I also thank them, as Mr. Fraser said, for the important work they have done since the beginning of the pandemic. It's exceptional.
My questions are addressed to representatives of the Department of Finance and are related to an article by finance columnist Francis Vailles that appeared in today's La Presse. Mr. Vailles raises a really important question about the cost of vaccines. The article is entitled “An $11-billion mystery”. I hope that today we will be able to shed some light on this.
It refers us to line 1.4.1, vaccines and therapeutics, in the fall economic statement 2020, page 8. The forecast is roughly $14 billion, almost equally divided between this year and next year.
In the first category, “Support for Medical Research and Vaccine Developments (2020 Snapshot)”, an amount of approximately $1 billion is projected.
At the next line, “Further support for medical research and vaccine2”, $13 billion is allocated. The small superscript refers to this footnote: “Spending profile adjusted to reflect updated departmental requirements.” What does this include? Mr. Vailles did the math. He takes the average price of a dose of vaccine in Europe or the United States. He calculates two doses for each of the 38 million people and arrives at a total of $2 billion. Even with a slight increase in price, it is difficult to reach $3 billion.
This brings the total to $2 billion and the amount of additional support for medical research and vaccines to $13 billion. If we subtract $2 billion from $13 billion, we get $11 billion, hence the title of the article “An $11-billion mystery”. In his article, he digs deeper. He learns, for example, that $284 million is allocated to the transportation of vaccines and the purchase of freezers, including for the Department of Public Services and Procurement Canada. There is also $800 million this year and next year, or $1.6 billion, for the Canadian research component of the Department of Innovation. So we're still $9 billion short.
Could you explain this, please?