Thank you very much.
The Canadian Union of Public Employees is Canada's largest union. It has over 700,000 members. CUPE members take great pride in delivering quality services in communities across Canada as they work in a broad cross-section of the economy, including health care, education, municipalities, libraries, universities, colleges, social services, public utilities, emergency services, transportation and airlines.
For all of our members, the pandemic has brought forward many underfunded, inadequate and altogether missing systems to the forefront. Now these workers need action. From our broken long-term care system, which still allows for-profit operators and poor working conditions, to the inadequate employment insurance system, we need substantial change to better serve workers in the services that we all rely on.
New programs such as the child care agreement, a national pharmacare program or a just transition require significant federal leadership and funding in order to be successful.
I recognize that borrowing in the current environment would be considered inflationary by the Bank of Canada and so lead to a further hiking of interest rates. However, the federal government has cut taxes for corporations and the wealthy over the past 20 years, which means that we have significant room to increase these taxes.
The tax rate for large profitable corporations was cut from 27% in the year 2000 down to 15% in 2007. The capital gains inclusion rate was cut from 75% to 50%. Just for the information of the members and those watching, capital gains is income from selling an investment asset, like real estate, other than your primary residence, or stocks. It's treated differently than employment income is. This is one way in which our tax system privileges wealth over income. The inclusion rate is used to calculate what portion of the profit is considered income for tax purposes. Research shows us that 90% of the benefit from this goes to the top 10% of income earners.
Stephen Harper also made steep cuts to the federal government's fiscal capacity, cutting the GST by two percentage points before the 2008 recession. Together, these cuts under Jean Chrétien, Paul Martin and Stephen Harper resulted in the federal government's revenue falling from 18% of GDP in the year 2000 to 14% in 2010. Under the current government, this percentage has risen slightly, to 15%. Just for reference, 1% of GDP is around $24 billion. That is, in current dollars, a significant amount of money.
This left a huge hole in the federal budget and has had a ripple effect across provincial budgets. When Stephen Harper cut the GST, he suggested that provinces could easily recover the lost revenue by raising provincial sales taxes, but provincial governments have faced backlash at the ballot box when they attempted to do so, and they've only managed to maintain the status quo on revenue as a share of GDP. It's much easier for the federal government to raise revenue than it is for provincial governments, which face real competition in terms of tax prices with their neighbours.
The result is that provincial governments have picked up a larger and larger share of total government spending in Canada, with no additional revenue sources to fund the critical services they provide. Restoring federal revenues to 2000 levels would mean at least an extra $50 billion a year to fund expanded public services. We recognize that with this additional funding it's essential that there be strong conditions to ensure that it is additional financing and not merely replacing what provinces are already spending.
This is especially true in health care, which is under threat of further privatization. We need strong national standards on how provinces and territories are allowed to spend these funds. CUPE wants to ensure that provinces and territories are prevented from using Canada health transfer funds on privatized health services, including for-profit medical facilities and for-profit care delivered through virtual health care systems.
Finally, municipalities own or control about 60% of Canada's core infrastructure. They should have the funding and authority to manage it and maintain it publicly. The federal government could play an important role in this by scrapping the current privatization mandate of the Canada Infrastructure Bank. The bank would better fill its purpose for the public if it prioritized direct financing to help local governments build public infrastructure.
Thank you very much.