Thank you.
Good morning, Mr. Chairman, members, and committee staff. For the record, my name is Peter Murdoch, and I am the vice-president, media, of the Communications, Energy and Paperworkers Union of Canada. With me is Michel Ouimet, executive vice-president for our Quebec region.
As Canada's largest communications union, CEP is pleased to appear before you. Our 32,000 telecommunications and broadcasting members, including 12,000 in Quebec, and thousands more across Canada, support a strong and prosperous communications system. It provides our members with high-quality jobs and pensions.
We firmly oppose the government's proposal to let non-Canadians own this country's communication system. Most importantly, the government simply hasn't made a case to show why we need foreign control. Last week the Department of Industry's officials implied that Canada should allow foreign control because countries like Mexico and Korea have already done so and this will somehow make prices fall while improving innovation.
Framing the debate this way ignores relevant facts. For instance, the number of competitors has actually decreased since competition was permitted in Canadian telecommunications. In 1951, Canada had 3,200 independent telephone systems. In 2006, 10 companies took in 93% of all telecommunications service revenues. After 20 years of price-based competition in both cable and telecommunications, prices in this country have not dropped, so why would foreign ownership in this sector be any different? Ironically, foreign investors might be even more attracted to Canadian telecommunications precisely because they could maintain high prices.
As for innovation, the OECD reported two years ago that Korea's fibre penetration is higher than total broadband penetration in five OECD countries. Looking at the Korean numbers more closely shows that they include the broadband-enabled mobile phones available in almost every household, which made its broadband penetration figures look higher than everywhere else.
We have some of the best universities and minds in the world. A Canadian invented radio. Canada was the third country to launch a communications satellite. RIM is a world leader in telecommunications technology. So why is the Canadian government now saying that the only way Canadians can enjoy new technology is to beg, borrow, or buy it from other nations?
The real problem has been that Canada's regulated telecommunications service providers have not had to innovate to reduce prices because the Telecommunications Act does not require the CRTC to regulate in the public interest.
As an advanced country, founded on the rule of law, with a well-educated workforce, Canada is obviously attractive to foreign investors. It has a stable economy, largely due to a highly praised and well-regulated banking system. Regulation has proved its worth to Canada's financial sector.
What will protect Canadians from problems related to oligopolies, privacy, and national security?
On Tuesday, for example, you heard that Canada's Competition Act will prevent large foreign companies from buying up Canadian telecommunications firms and acquiring market dominance. But even domestically this legislation has not worked well. It certainly has not stopped Canada's cable systems from buying up their competitors so that five companies now set the prices for 90% of all cable subscribers in Canada. And neither the Competition Act nor the Broadcasting Act stopped Jim Shaw Sr. and Ted Rogers from agreeing ten years ago that although they could compete in each other's market, they would not. When the CRTC ignores this behaviour and it does not even publish information about how much Canadians are actually paying each month for cable or telephone, it's little wonder that prices shoot up without restraint, making the sector even more attractive to foreign purchasers.
As for privacy, Canada's Privacy Commissioner has already warned that when data leaves Canada, its control rests in the hands of other countries, not Canadians. Even if foreign-owned Canadian companies must follow Canadian personal information law, what stops foreign parent companies from sharing Canadians' personal information and data with their own countries' governments? For instance, how many of us know that U.S. laws allow American companies to obtain intelligence information from telecommunications companies outside the U.S?
Now, let's say accessing new technology and the chance of lower telephone rates are more important than privacy, oligopolies, and national security. No one just shares technology any more. Today's foreign investment contracts govern precisely how much information foreign companies will share with Canadians. As for any new research and development that foreign companies undertake in Canada, consumers might at some point benefit from it, but the foreign companies, not Canadians, will hold the patent rights to those technologies. The revenues from those inventions will be leaving this country, not remaining here to support new investment and innovation.
Let's not forget that any industrial policy enacted by government must be based on more than prices or shareholder value. It must be based on employment opportunities for Canadians. Since 1999, every major merger in Canadian broadcasting has been financed by layoffs, close to 9,000 to date. Maybe it will be different in telecommunications, but that's hard to say, because data published by the CRTC about employment trends there are very difficult to find.
But suppose we allow AT&T to buy Telus. If the U.S. economy happened to lose ground, why would AT&T ignore the savings it could gain by cutting jobs in Canada?
Michel.