Thank you, Mr. Chair.
I want to thank our guests for coming this morning.
I have a couple of questions, but I do have to make a comment. I am on the finance committee, and we have looked at the banking system.
Mr. Rafferty talked about our banking system being in the same position as some of our friends south of the border. That is just not the case. There was one bank that was more exposed than others to the bundling of paper that wasn't worth anything, but it still wasn't enough to make a significant dent, and some of the banks didn't touch it at all. So we're in much better shape, and I do take some offence to that comment that our banking system is in the same shape as the U.S. That's just not accurate.
My first question, I guess, would be to you, Mr. Benson, since you've been around a little bit on the Hill on this. I have a fundamental....
And this is me speaking, not my side of the table here or anything.
Here we have a bill to deal with pensions that's eight clauses long. It makes significant changes.
And just so you know how a private member's bill operates, you call over and say, “My slot is up, I want to make a bill that says the sky is blue. Can you send me the legalese to make that happen?” They send you a few paragraphs, if that's all it takes to make that happen, and there's no review by the department in terms of its legality or from a policy perspective. There's no analysis. It's my bill: I can go forward and do it.
And in fact in this case, Mr. Rafferty picked it up from somebody else. It wasn't even his doing.
I'm not criticizing anybody for doing it. Private members' bills in my view do a great job of bringing the issue forward and making it part of the discussion of Parliament, committee, and so on. But in my view, if we are going to make significant changes to the pension system in Canada, the pressure should be on the government of the day, which is us, to make proper legal acts.
Normally when we do a bill at this committee or any committee, we get a binder. Some binders are bigger. In finance they're huge. Most bills come with a binder full of stuff. They're well studied, well analyzed.
Do you have any concerns that we're making such changes...?
I think there are eight clauses in here, and we have eight amendments to seven clauses or something like that.
So my view is that this bill is flawed in that it's not at the level of scrutiny it needs to have to make a significant difference to our pension system.
I would appreciate a comment on that.