Thank you, Chair, and thank you, colleagues.
I would just say that we ought to think back to the testimony that was given by the Parliamentary Budget Officer last week. The question was put to him about the debt-to-GDP ratio, and he said it was in and around the range of 50% now, which admittedly is high. Certainly in relative terms, it exceeds in significant ways what we saw prior to the pandemic. However, it's a pandemic, and that necessitated emergency programs, which were bound to drive up the overall debt.
We have a debt-to-GDP ratio that still, compared to other G7 countries, is quite healthy and quite strong. Compare, for example, Canada's debt-to-GDP ratio to those of the U.K., Germany and the United States. All those countries, whose economies are considered by the vast majority of economists to be very strong still, have debt-to-GDP ratios that far exceed what exists in Canada at the present time.
The other point I would make to ease the concern of Conservative colleagues is that we've been here before. In the early 2000s, Mr. Chair, as you know, the debt-to-GDP ratio was at about the same level it is now, give or take a bit, and we were still able to see robust economic growth well into the 2000s. Of course, things turned in 2008, but that's a different story.
I think these points need to be put onto the table to reflect what actually exists and to provide context. Officials have already spoken to the distinction—the very important one—between borrowing authority and spending authority, Mr. Chair, so for that reason, I won't be supporting the amendment.