Thank you very much, Mr. Chair. I appreciate very much the opportunity to be here today.
Today, of course, is National Hunger Awareness Day in Canada. There are more than 700,000 people going to food banks, so it's particularly appropriate today that this committee turns its mind to the issue of poverty.
About seven months ago, when the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development released its survey of 30 developed countries in the world and revealed that Canada has the second-worst record in terms of deep and persistent poverty and income inequality among the OECD countries, it actually pointed to the federal fiscal policy over the last decade as being a primary cause of poverty and income inequality. It said ongoing tax cuts, which primarily benefit higher-income people and profitable corporations, and social spending cuts, which primarily affect lower-income people, are responsible for Canada's very poor record relative to other countries in the OECD.
The Wellesley Institute has released its own research, which looks at some of the issues around income and poverty. In particular, in December we released what is the most comprehensive and current review of income and health in Canada. Among other things, we looked at 39 health indicators by income, and we found that the poorest one-fifth of Canadians, when compared to the richest one-fifth, have more than double the rate of diabetes and heart disease, a 60% greater rate of two or more chronic health conditions, up to three times the rate of bronchitis, nearly double the rate of arthritis and rheumatism. The good news in this, in the midst of the pile of bad news, was that we were able to demonstrate, using multivariate analysis, that every $1,000 increase in income for lower-income people leads to substantial increases in health. The good news is that there are things that can be done that will have an impact.
Our survey that was released in December was called, somewhat fittingly, Poverty is making us sick.
We've submitted a written submission to the HUMA committee and have identified seven specific recommendations that we believe will strengthen the federal role in reducing poverty. I'm happy to take those up in the question period, but let me just quickly review the seven of them.
First of all, we think Statistics Canada needs to have the mandate and the resources to properly identify robust and timely individual and composite statistical measures of the dimensions of poverty. There's an old saying that if you can't measure it, you can't manage it, and that's certainly the case in Canada. We're far behind other countries in terms of measuring and managing poverty.
Second, we believe Canada's vital social sector, the third sector, needs to be properly acknowledged, fully engaged, and strengthened.
Third, the federal government urgently needs a national affordable housing plan that builds on our legal obligations under the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights.
Fourth, federal health care spending needs to include a national community health plan.
Fifth, the federal government needs to launch a national campaign to eliminate poverty and reduce income inequalities.
Sixth, the federal government needs a national campaign to reduce health inequalities.
Seventh, we're recommending that the federal government reverse federal policy of the past two decades that relies on tax cuts that primarily benefit wealthier Canadians, funded by social spending cuts that primarily hurt lower-income Canadians.
I want to acknowledge in my remaining minute or two that the federal government has made several substantial promises in terms of new investments that will have an important impact on poverty. In particular, eight months ago the federal government announced a $1.9 billion extension of three programs, the federal homelessness initiative, the federal home renovation program, and the federal-provincial affordable housing initiative. That was $1.9 billion over five years. Then, in January, in the most recent federal budget, as part of its economic stimulus package, the government announced $2 billion for several specific affordable housing initiatives. These announcements build on or extend existing federal initiatives, and therefore they give rise to two very particular questions.
The first question is, how quickly is the federal government allocating the funding that it has promised? Secondly, are the investments that have been promised actually meeting the housing and homelessness needs of Canadians?
On the first point, we've done a preliminary tally, and I'm happy to share that with you. In the nine months since the September announcement, and a month after the funding for the federal homelessness initiative, the housing renovation plan, and the affordable housing initiative expired, the federal government has announced that it has allocated $81.7 million of the $1.9 billion promised--that's 4% of the total amount promised. That's 4% over nine months. The record is slightly better in terms of the January economic stimulus announcement. As of today, the federal government has allocated $884.3 million, or about 43% of the total amount promised.
On the second point, with respect to whether these investments are actually going meet the housing and homeless needs of Canadians, I have some information for you. The federal government has been remarkably reluctant to release detailed information on its affordable housing investments since 2001. However, in the last couple of days the Wellesley Institute has received, via a freedom of information request, detailed information on the federal-provincial affordable housing program. We've just begun to do a preliminary analysis of what the government has invested and funded.
We started with the 2007-08 fiscal year and looked in particular at the federal government's funding for the development of 1,096 new affordable homes in Ontario. According to the information from the federal government, the average rent for these homes was $685, which is only about 14% below the average private market rent in Ontario. Using a standard of affordability calculation, we found that a renter household would need an annual income of $27,300 to live in these new so-called affordable homes. However, more than one in four Ontario households earned less than that in 2007. In fact, one-quarter of all Ontario households cannot afford the federal government's so-called affordable homes.
I'd be pleased during the question and answer session to provide more detail and speak to the recommendations and statistical indicators that we've included in our package.
Thank you.