I'll say thank you to Mr. MacDonald and to Prince Edward Island. We're all happy that the federal, provincial and territorial group of finance ministers was chaired by Prince Edward Island.
I did inform the chair this morning of our new way of doing this. I think it's very simple. The world is changing at a pace that we have rarely seen before. The speed, the scale and the scope of the change require that we adapt. Today, it gives us an opportunity to focus on our core objective, which is to spend less so we can invest more. That's why we're presenting a new capital budgeting framework and a new budget cycle.
The first one responds to clarity, because members of Parliament have been asking us through the committee—and I know the vice-chair will go on the record—to change the budget cycle in order to leave more time for parliamentarians to see the budget when they vote for the main estimates, because the main estimates have to be presented by March 31. There have been instances in the past when the budget came after the main estimates, which is not ideal. We've been asked, and we're responding to that.
The second thing is predictability for a province or a territory or a business. I think about all these organizations in the country that depend on federal funding for their functioning and their operation. They would like to know whether they will be getting funds in the budget ahead of their own fiscal year. Depending on the timing of their fiscal year, it's difficult for them when they don't know what the federal contribution is going to be.
Lastly, Mr. MacDonald, you will understand this because you've been an entrepreneur. You've been very successful, and we're lucky to have you in Parliament now. If there's one thing that doesn't wait for parliamentarians, it's the construction season. That won't be a surprise to our friends from Alberta, because in Alberta and in different parts of the country, I've heard from people who ask me—and I was the infrastructure minister before—if I can align our decisions with the construction season. If a budget is presented in the spring, for example, and you need to build in the north, you need to book the barge a year in advance. If you can't book that, if you can't book your workers and you cannot have requests for proposals from entrepreneurs by that time, it's too late. We can't afford as a nation to miss another construction season. We can't afford that. We need to make generational investments in our future.
That's why this framework will help us to focus on what matters, prioritize our investments and be more transparent to Canadians. That's why you have seen provinces and groups thanking us for changing that. Even the vice-chair of the committee would agree. That's what we've been asked for, and we're responding to the wishes of Parliament. For me, it's about setting the clock straight.
After that, the committee and the chair will have to decide when you do your budget consultation. We will certainly do that all through the summer, and we do that all year. I want to thank Mr. Turnbull for all the work he's done this summer.
One thing that is slightly offensive is to say that we haven't consulted. This is probably the largest public consultation for a budget that we have seen in the last 10 years. Therefore, I think this is going to be welcomed by Canadians. They want more transparency and more clarity. I think that presenting the difference in terms of where their money goes with respect to capital investment and day-to-day spending is adding. That's why I don't understand the criticism from my Conservative colleagues, because this is adding. It's not replacing. It's just providing a new lens. I can tell you that the deficit and the debt will be recorded in the same manner as in previous budgets, but this is going to provide an additional lens so that more information is provided to people. As parliamentarians, we should all welcome that.