Thank you, Mr. Eyking.
Gentlemen, I'm going to take the last Conservative spot.
I do want to thank you all for being here today. I want to thank you for this discussion. I also want to thank you for the leadership you showed, certainly in the manufacturing report, in terms of putting pressure and bringing forward specific recommendations. I do want to thank you all for that.
As well, I want to counsel you to keep hope, because if you look at these recommendations, I'm quite positive about the reaction.
I even look at your presentation, Mr. Myers, and you said that short-term interest rates should be reduced by at least 25 basis points in December. I don't know if you have a direct pipeline to David Dodge, but that's exactly what he did. In part, you mention the U.S. and the Canadian economy. If you look at the Canadian economy, there is actually a weakness, especially in the conventional oil and gas sector in western Canada, that I think is causing some room for the governor to move.
I do, though, want to drill down to one of the recommendations—and I think most of you, or all of you, have mentioned it here—with respect to refundability for R and D tax credits. First of all, it's something that's said, and I think most members of this committee are familiar with it, but I don't know how many members of Parliament are familiar with exactly what that means. So I want you to drill it down on a very basic level, but secondly, address the issue that you know we will get from the finance department, which is that this is an $8 billion fiscal cost over five years. That's what Finance does; they look at fiscal cost, which is appropriate, but they don't look at fiscal benefits.
So address the issue of what refundability for SR and ED actually means; and secondly, the response in terms of an $8 billion fiscal cost over five years.
If you can address those two issues, I'd leave it open to whoever would like to address that.