That's exactly right. On the credit side, Canada's scientific research and experimental development or SR and ED tax credit program is by and large a good program. It's a very good program for emerging companies that are Canadian-controlled private companies, CCPCs. The reason it's very good for them is that they get a refundable credit of 35% of their expenditures: they get cash back, and that helps feed into maintaining it.
The problem with that program is that it's only CCPC companies that get it. Many companies have gone for foreign direct investment, so they lose the CCPC status. They may have gone public and have done an initial public offering, a small IPO for a couple of million dollars; they lose that credit. In exchange, when they lose it, they only get a 20% future tax credit. Well, these companies aren't paying taxes; they want to get to that stage.
So our recommendation is to change this to make that money refundable to all companies in that same stage, no matter who owns them. You only get that credit if you do the work in Canada, so it's Canadian jobs that it's focused on. It gives the incentive to do work in Canada.
That's a nice change. It will take a little longer to see that money track back into companies, but they can apply for loans against it, because they know it's going to come, and they can get an advance. That helps.
The second recommendation we had is about how to give companies.... Traditionally, as Bernard mentioned, companies don't go to banks for loans; they rely on venture capital markets. Our point is that they're sitting on a lot of tax losses, so instead of having some multinational buy them for those tax losses and the government paying for nothing, really, why don't we give them an advance, a loan against those tax losses, and hold them as collateral? That way, we'll put the money quickly into companies, today. They can keep spending it—we give them a requirement that they spend it on R and D—and it keeps them going as we get through this credit crisis and allows them to capture other R and D credits later.
This could be very quick, because the companies all have their audited statements. The CRA, the revenue agency, knows what everyone's accumulated tax losses are. You basically can figure out exactly how much of a loan a company would qualify for. There's a way you can administratively make it very quick to put some cash in. You can't get any more “shovel ready”, because those jobs are still here; we just want to keep them.