Thank you for having us. My name is Max Skudra. I'm from the Canadian Council for Aboriginal Business. I'm the director of government relations and research. I'd like to recognize that we're on the traditional territories of the Algonquin people. It's great to be here. It's colder than where I'm from in Toronto, but I guess it's Canada, so why complain. Sorry, I should say, don't hold it against me that I'm from Toronto, please. I'm shooting myself in the foot with that one.
CCAB has been around for over 30 years. We're an aboriginal business council representing over 500 members, 70% of whom are indigenous companies. We have a number of programs and policies, which I don't have time in the 10 minutes to talk about, so I'm going to get right into what we think about procurements and some of the work we've done.
We've been doing research on this issue for over five years now. As was mentioned in the previous presentation, we put out our “Promise and Prosperity” report. I did this, so I'm very proud of it actually, if we're being honest. We have it in French, as well as English, if anyone on the committee would like it. We interviewed over 1,100 aboriginal businesses. We've done this twice in five-year segments, so we have very good longitudinal data on aboriginal businesses and what they're doing. The inside joke is that I harass more aboriginal companies and business people than anyone else in the country with phone calls and interviews.
To build on a point she made earlier, the real high level is that aboriginal business is booming in Canada. In the last five years, we've seen a 15% increase in the number of profitable companies coast to coast to coast. Those companies have also increased in their actual profitability, so both more profitable firms and more-profitable firms. We think that this is a dynamic and a momentum that is just building. You're seeing increased innovation, increased optimism, and increased trade in almost every sector and in every province and territory.
This kind of renaissance that you're seeing right now is creating an indigenous economy in Canada worth over $30 billion, with $12 billion in the businesses alone. That's both privately owned firms, as well as community-owned corporations. These companies are doing everything from graphic design to major energy plays in Alberta. Some research we've done with TD Bank estimates that there are roughly 43,000 indigenous companies in Canada and I think that we are going to revise that upward, based on the most recent census data.
These are all really positive overall trends and I think you've seen some really progressive work on the government-side around PSAB trying to support that growth. I should just say that PSAB is something that generally we support. We think it's a great idea. There has been some great work done to support indigenous businesses. You'll see single years where there's $60 million or $80 million or $100 million being done between the Government of Canada and indigenous businesses. Stand alone, that's great. I think it's when you look at it in context that it becomes a little less stellar.
If you look at some of our partners in the oil sands, for example, Imperial Oil is doing $220 million-plus with indigenous suppliers, Syncrude is doing $300 million-plus a year, and Suncor is doing over $400 million a year with aboriginal companies. Among them, they're doing almost $1 billion of work a year and that's three companies in one region of Canada. Contrast that to what's being done nationally by PSAB, keeping in mind that the federal government is the largest single purchaser of goods and services in the country, and I think there's obviously room for improvement.
I think that this really plays into renewing the fiscal relationship discussion, as procuring goods and services from aboriginal companies gets directly to small business owners and SME business owners from coast to coast to coast.
I would agree with the comments made earlier that, among the biggest hurdles are some of the definitional issues, where companies won't have access to PSAB. I recognize that obviously, Canada's federal procurement has to stay within international trade agreements, but I would say that the application of the set-asides is probably a little more conservative than it could be and I think it could be used a bit more widely. That alone, I think, would see a significant increase.
The other points that I think CCAB has seen—and we work with all sorts of firms, aboriginal and non—is that while PSAB directly targets aboriginal companies, what I think is really critical is that we start to have larger contracts, for example, the shipbuilding with Seaspan, that have explicit language that ensures that throughout the supply chain, there's a focus on engaging aboriginal companies.
I can tell you what Suncor has done with Sivio to its supply chain. That's the best practice in corporate Canada today. It's to ensure that tier-one suppliers, the first purchasers, are looking not only at who they're buying from but who those people are purchasing from, and making sure that there's a real and sincere effort, and a trackable and measurable effort, that's accountable, that ensures throughout the supply chain there are aboriginal businesses present.
As we've heard earlier, and I agree 100%, the majority of aboriginal companies are relatively quite small. To think that the federal government, on a major contract, is going to be able to directly hire, for a $30-billion shipping contract, an indigenous business is unrealistic. We've been in a number of conversations with senior leadership in the defence sector, and many of them will say they'd be happy to but these contracts are so competitive that unless there's explicit language saying they need to or they'll be incentivized to, they won't because doing so would put them at a competitive disadvantage on a very lucrative contract.
The one thing CCAB would like to recommend is a focus on supply chain and ensuring that large purchases and large contracts that go to non-indigenous businesses have language that ensures that aboriginal businesses are included throughout the supply chain. That's the first thing.
The second thing is absolutely opening up the procurement to small businesses directly, specifically at around the $100,000 mark. That's where the majority of small aboriginal companies are looking for contracts. At that data point, roughly—and, plug, we're doing more research so we'll have more information for you on this shortly—that would really open things up.
The third is facilitating joint ventures and ensuring that aboriginal companies are incentivized to work with corporate Canada and that those structures see some support from government.
Now that I've eaten up all the time....