Good afternoon, Mr. Chair.
Thank you for inviting our organization, the Conseil national des chômeurs et chômeuses, to take part in this discussion on Bill C-241, a bill that aims to remove the waiting period for EI.
We've prepared a short three-page document, of approximately 1,000 words. It is translated into English. I assume you've received a copy of it. As you probably have guessed, we fully support the proposed bill. It is something we have been calling for for a long time.
The imposition of a waiting period is part of a bygone vision and method. To force the worker who has just lost his or her employment to support the first two weeks of unemployment is not only unfortunate, but also imposes important sacrifices on families who often do not have sufficient savings to carry them through. This problem is caused by the waiting period.
To illustrate what we consider to be something a little more modern and rallying, I will speak of the realities closest to home. I am from Quebec, so I will refer to the application of two social laws in Quebec.
I will start with the Quebec Parental Insurance Plan. Quebec repatriated part of the Employment Insurance Act. The act is a constitutional agreement between the federal government and the provinces that was signed in 1940 and that sets out that a province may, in whole or in part, repatriate the application of the act. That is what we did with the parts dealing with parental and maternity benefits, by creating, officially as of January 1, 2006, the Quebec Parental Insurance Plan. We also added another category of benefits, paternity benefits. So, there are maternity, paternity and parental benefits.
Obviously, this program had to follow the functioning of the Employment Insurance Act since it was a repatriation of this same law. However, it simplified the application of the act, for example, in terms of the calculation of the rate of benefits. In fact, the benefit rate is higher.
This parental insurance plan is of universal access. Individuals need not have accumulated hours of work to qualify, rather, they must show they had a minimum income of $2,000 during the previous year. This is a plan that protects workers and the self-employed, and I would reiterate that this has been the case since January 1, 2006, almost four years now. As for what interests us, the plan abolished the wait period. The Quebec Parental Insurance Plan does not include a waiting period. Elsewhere in Canada, men and women claiming maternity or parental benefits must deal with the two-week waiting period.
In other words, there was an all-encompassing and modern approach that aimed to ensure real revenue security for new mothers and fathers. This program is supported solely by the premiums of employers and their employees according to a 60/40 split, the same as the employment insurance plan.
Mr. Chair, to take the example of another socially oriented law, I will speak of the CSST, the commission that embodies the Occupational Health and Safety Act. This type of social law exists in each province. I do not know the specifics of each one, but I can tell you about Quebec's. Quebec does not impose a wait period. Better yet, the first two weeks of work stoppage resulting from a workplace accident from professional illness are paid for by the employer and then reimbursed by the Commission de la santé et de la sécurité au travail. There is no waiting period.
Let's look beyond our borders and see what is happening elsewhere in the world. If we compare ourselves to other countries on the specific issue of a waiting period, we risk feeling sorry for ourselves. Out of all developed countries that have an employment insurance program, Canada is the one that imposes the longest waiting period. Several countries do not have one at all: Belgium, Denmark, Germany, Portugal, Spain, and the Netherlands. Other countries such as Finland, France, Italy, Norway, Sweden, Switzerland and the United Kingdom have a waiting period between five to seven days. It does not go beyond a week.
If we look to our neighbours to the south, we see that the United States imposes a waiting period that never exceeds one week, in any of the states. In some cases, there is no wait time; sometimes it is five days, but it is never longer than one week. This calls to mind the question: what is Canada waiting for to tune in with the rest of the world?
Does such a measure involve costs? Of course. In a calendar period of unemployment, there is currently a two-week, unpaid waiting period. On average, in Canada, individuals receive 17 weeks of paid benefits.
If we remove the waiting period, the unemployment calendar period will remain the same, except that the waiting period of two weeks will have to be paid for. In 2007, we wanted to put a dollar figure on some of our demands. We hired a professional researcher, who found that removing the waiting time would cost approximately $1 billion. A study done by the Toronto-Dominion Bank on April 30, 2009 looked at a series of possible improvements to the employment insurance scheme and assessed the cost of removing the waiting period at approximately $1 billion. The assessment was carried out in the spring, when the crisis was at its worst.
What does one billion dollars translate into? It represents ten cents in premiums, to put $1 billion more into the employment insurance fund. Can we afford such a measure? Of course. However, we are currently paying fixed dues of $1.73. That was the case in 2008. There has been a freeze for 2009 and 2010; the premium will remain at $1.73. It should be noted that premiums stood at $3.08 in 1996.
This is a very important consideration to us. Indeed the chief actuary, who published his report just last week, said that in order to cover estimated expenditures for 2010—and the chief actuary rarely makes mistakes—the premium rate should be set at $2.43. This 70¢ difference for next year indicates a shortfall of approximately $7 billion. As Gabriel Garcia Marquez would say: chronicle of a deficit foretold.
We can bet that for 2009, the fund will also be short several billion dollars. The current government acts as if it is planning the next deficit of the employment insurance fund to justify its refusal to better the program, or worse, to justify further cuts, as we experienced in the early nineties.
To understand what happens when there is a deficit in the EI fund, I would like to quote from the chief actuary's report. In Appendix VIII of his report, he states, and I quote:
Effective October 23, 1990, total program costs are met from employer/employee premiums. The government provides temporary refundable advances as needed, or may temporarily use available surpluses, all with interest.
That is to preempt the argument we will hear next year to the effect that the government must address the fund deficit.
In conclusion, we believe that it is possible to simplify the employment insurance program, that it is possible to better it, to modernize it, and that our vision of "modern" includes the removal of the waiting period. This same vision will increase access to the employment insurance program, a truly essential issue.
I said this last week, and I will repeat it: This summer at the end of July, at the Council of the Federation meeting, the premiers of all 10 Canadian provinces unanimously called on the federal government to address the issue of eligibility.
That is in addition to all the others who have expressed their views on the subject, be it municipalities, institutions, unions, groups like ours, churches or numerous political observers. This situation must be dealt with.
We sincerely believe that the purpose of politics is to find solutions to problems. The removal of the waiting period is a proposed solution to the problem. We believe political action involves a desire to bring people together. We therefore ask the following question: Can this parliamentary committee unanimously support Bill C-241 in a non-partisan manner?
Thank you.