Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
Thank you for giving us this opportunity to address the committee on this important topic.
I'd like to begin by briefly describing what the Electro-Federation is. It's an association of electrical and electronic manufacturers and electrical wholesalers. Within our group, we have seven councils, including the Canadian Appliance Manufacturers Association, the Electrical Equipment Manufacturers' Association of Canada, and consumer electronic manufacturers, which include some making telecommunications equipment. Those are some of the companies.
The products our members make can be anything from freezers and refrigerators to lamps, wall receptacles, electric motors, automation equipment, home entertainment systems, BlackBerrys, cellular phones, and so on. This gives you an idea of the breadth in the different types of products that our members make.
Our association comprises some 300 member companies, with an annual turnover in the neighbourhood of $50 billion, employing some 130,000 Canadians all across the country.
Once a year, our members come to Ottawa to meet with members of Parliament and have sessions on various issues. This year, in the middle of October, our session was dedicated to the concerns about manufacturing competitiveness in Canada. We had a number of presenters, and their presentations are included with the handouts, together with the covering note.
First, I would like to go over a few of the key points that were made in those presentations, and then make a few policy recommendations—many of which you have heard in the past—where we support a broader coalition of industries, with a specific focus on our industry and the needs of our members.
First, when you look at our membership, these are dynamic companies committing resources to innovation and productivity increases, and they have done a lot of work in the area of cost containment in a highly competitive environment. The presentation that nicely describes the whole process was prepared by Pierre-Paul Riopel, who is the vice-president of manufacturing at Thomas & Betts Canada.
Thomas & Betts employs some 1,300 people in manufacturing, mostly in Quebec and the Eastern Townships. It's a subsidiary of a U.S.-based company that develops products in Canada for domestic and export markets. It has a full engineering and manufacturing capability, and it's a very prominent member of our association.
Some of the key points they make in their presentation have to do with what it takes to implement lean manufacturing. It requires a lot of training, commitment, resources for training—that is why, as you will see later, we're making some of the policy recommendations—and investment in new technology, IT, to ensure that they have the most modern and cost-competitive processes.
When you look at the scope of the products our members manufacture, they include industrial automation products and energy-efficient—EnergyStar-rated—appliances, such as lamps, premium energy-efficient motors, and many similar products that contribute to increased productivity and to reduced energy consumption and energy costs. In other words, the activities of our members not only require support for them to be competitive, but they contribute to the competiveness of the larger manufacturing community in Canada.
When you look at what our manufacturers have been facing—and much of it has already been captured in your preliminary report, which we echo—they have been hit simultaneously with higher energy costs, volatile and rising commodity prices, and a rapid appreciation of Canadian currency, in addition to all of the usual effects of globalization: the Wal-Mart effect, increased competition, reduced prices, and the effect of products coming in from Asia.
The next two points we made in our presentations were contained in Mr. Wood's presentation, and he can speak to the details.
Canadian manufacturers are absorbing higher taxes than importers, and this represents a significant differential to product costs. Our members believe this is an unsustainable competitive disadvantage that is further exacerbated by the high value of our currency. Together with that, there is the issue of the method of tax collection. In our view, it is as important as the amount of taxes collected. This is of particular importance when relating the impact of taxes on domestic products to the impact on foreign competitors.
Mr. Barrett, who is the CEO of Emerson Canada—this is a company with some 3,000 employees in 12 plants—described in his presentation.... We did this in collaboration with the Canadian Manufacturers & Exporters. He is our member, but he is also chair of CME.
He talks about the process by which capital projects are approved. What he is talking about is the need to attain a return on capital that exceeds the risk-adjusted cost of capital and the method by which it's evaluated in terms of the risk associated with a longer-term payback period. In other words, projects that have a shorter payback period are obviously deemed to be more desirable and less risky.
He goes through—and you have the handout of the presentation—the steps and the investments when the manufacturer makes the investments, but also where the public sector can make investments: in infrastructure; in throughput, for example, through the ports; in support of training and skills development. In his absence, I would be pleased to answer some questions that may arise from his presentation.
That being said, in collaboration with other industry associations, there are several measures we would support.
The first one is the two-year write-off for investments—capital cost allowance—in manufacturing, processing, and associated information and communication, energy, and environmental technologies; in other words, not just for machinery, but for the whole gamut of investments that need to be made to ensure a competitive manufacturing establishment.
We certainly support the government's initiative and support its maintaining its commitment to lower the federal corporate tax from the current 21% to 19%, and eventually to 17%.
We believe there is room for improvement to the science research and experimental development tax credit. The issue there is accessibility; it's certainty of being able to include the refund, rather than a credit, in the project evaluation right from the beginning. It should be more broadly based and include international collaborative research and development, costs of patenting, prototyping, product testing and other pre-commercialization activities, and not be restricted. It's a very good program, but it's somewhat restrictive, and we believe that if it were expanded it would yield benefits.
We've talked about training. Training is essential and requires a tremendous amount of commitment by manufacturers: implementing new IT technologies, which are vital to communications in dealing with issues, such as cross-border trade—when you have to deal with the broker, submit the documentation on time, make sure the products get across quickly—skills development dealing with new technologies in automation, and so on. Companies that make that commitment should be able to receive some tax credit against their EI premiums, recognizing that a better-trained workforce is less likely to burden the employment insurance with claims.
Finally, the last policy recommendation we would make has to do with user fees and the whole regulatory regime. We believe user fees should be applied to the purpose for which they were collected and there should be some audit trail and accountability, and also that the whole regulatory process should be competitive in terms of costs and in terms of timeliness. We believe there is room for the introduction of smart regulation and mutual agreements with other jurisdictions where similar or identical testing--for example, qualification of products--is being done. So the whole regulatory environment becomes part of the competitive environment for manufacturers.
In conclusion, we believe in the positive future of manufacturing in the electrical and electronic sectors in Canada. We look forward to working with you in advancing competitiveness of manufacturing, and we believe the time to act is now.