Insofar as it's accessible to so very few and has such very difficult administrative rules, I think it does in fact create a great deal of poverty. You can see the huge shift in Ontario. I was very involved with government around social assistance, and the shifts to EI made enormous differences to our caseloads here in Ontario. There is no question that it creates poverty.
The low level of the benefits is another problem. If somebody has been living for 20 years on a certain income and then all of a sudden is expected to survive on 50% of it, that creates a problem in and of itself.
The fact that the government was also able to take the revenue from there, which workers paid in, and then throw it off into the general pot and run off with it, to me represents a theft, and I have to say that Canadians are becoming more and more aware of these things. They're not only seeing that it creates poverty, which indeed it does, but also seeing the fact that we were robbed of those moneys.
Frankly, I think you'll find that on the street people are saying that not only is there this $50 billion and more that they ran off with from the EI fund, which was ours, but there's also some $200 billion that was given to bail out the banks and these kinds of things. This is becoming a big problem. People are noticing now. They're not as asleep as they were. There is a lot of anger, because this is our money and we know this. Frankly, I think a lot of people feel it's not just about poverty reduction; it's about reparations to pay back what has been taken from us over the last 15 years when everybody was, for a while, hoodwinked by this whole idea of deficits or whatever.
To me, this raises the fact that if we have been able to get to a point where our government felt it had the right to do that, we also then have to look more broadly at our economic framework and ask ourselves some questions about what it is we're valuing and what it is we're trying to achieve. I have to say that the only commitment that Canada kept to the World Summit for Social Development was a commitment to examine our national accounting system and how we value things. That was the only commitment. There was some work done, but then it was just scrapped, lost, and forgotten about.
I would say that at this time, when we're all becoming economies in transition because of all the difficulties we are facing now, this is a perfect time to look at those things and ask how we can shift the actual framework, so that we can say when something is going well for the most vulnerable that it's actually a success instead of a loss. Until we have a better accounting system, we're hopeless. We're not going to get anywhere, as far as I'm concerned. EI is a part of that whole picture that says it's a success when we make a profit over here, never mind how many people suffer.