Thank you.
Coming back to the real estate for a minute, I found the meeting today quite interesting, and the minister has provided some great information, so thank you.
Minister, in answer to my question before about transferring the risk, you were very clear about transferring the risk to the private sector with this sale. We are also selling assets that have significant value. As Ms. Nash said before, in reiterating what the value of these real estate assets has been, it has grown quite substantially.
For example, the Howard Green Building in Vancouver was purchased just five years ago for $58 million, and now it's worth some $105 million. A landmark building in Toronto, 4900 Yonge Street, I notice has also gone up substantially in value: a market assessment less than $80 million in 2002, now $180 million.
So we've seen a big appreciation in the value of these real estate assets. It comes back to the main point that Mr. Simard was making a few minutes ago, and that is the justification, because when we transfer the risks to the private sector, we're also transferring the asset to the private sector. We're entering into a 25-year lease to lease these buildings back, so that is a cost to us as a tenant over 25 years, and at the end of 25 years we have no asset.
We realize the gain in that asset, and 25 years later, what would that have been compared to the capital gain on that asset over that period of time, compared with the maintenance cost of it? It's a cost-benefit package, where one has to weigh very carefully whether the Government of Canada and the taxpayers are further ahead owning these assets at the end of a long period of time or not.
Experience has shown us to date that we've won in terms of capital gains on these buildings. That comes back to the necessity of seeing your justification. I don't know how we, as committee members, can really express an opinion on that until we have the same knowledge that you do, seeing the cost-benefit analysis of owning versus leasing.
How do you ever win when you sell an asset and lease it back, an asset that has shown tremendous capital gain appreciation, and all of a sudden you have no capital gain any more, and yet you incur the cost as a tenant? How do the taxpayers of Canada win by selling the family jewels?