Thank you for having me today. My name is Martin Lavoie. I'm the director of policy, manufacturing competitiveness and innovation for Canadian Manufacturers and Exporters. We represent about 10,000 manufacturers and exporters across the country.
We applaud the committee for undertaking this study. We believe it's a very important one for us, especially in today's global economic environment.
I would like to focus my remarks on three specific issues of the IP regime that affect the manufacturing sector: the first one is counterfeiting; the second is the commercialization of research; and the third is tax incentives for business R and D, including the proposed changes to the SR and ED tax credit.
Starting with counterfeiting, one of the major weaknesses of Canada's IP protection regime as it relates to counterfeiting is the lack of prosecutorial resources for police and customs agents; in other words, the government does not allow enough resources to conduct searches at the border for counterfeit goods.
Beyond the problems it creates in our domestic market, this has a huge impact on Canada's exports. I would like to point out that both the World Trade Organization Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights as well as NAFTA require criminal enforcement and border measures.
The·Office of the United States Trade Representative, USTR, has a special watch list. It's called the “Special 301 Watch List”, and it has included Canada for the past several years for our failure to implement our international obligations or to take effective enforcement action against counterfeit and pirated goods, especially at the border. This watch list is an annual review of the global state of the protection and enforcement of intellectual property rights. In its latest version in 2011, it put Canada in a very select group of countries that also included China, Algeria, India, Russia, Venezuela, Pakistan, Belarus, and Thailand.
The 2011 report concludes the Canada section by stating:
The United States encourages Canada to provide for deterrent-level sentences to be imposed for IPR violations, as well as to strengthen enforcement efforts, including at the border. Canada should provide its Customs officials with ex officio authority to effectively stop the transit of counterfeit and pirated products through its territory.
We have been advocating since 2006 for more resources for customs agents to stop the transit of counterfeit products, and for a better share of information between enforcement authorities such as the CBSA and the RCMP.
I want to touch on commercialization of research without repeating what has been said before, both today and at other meetings. One particular aspect of what Mr. Gupta talked about was how to generate more revenues with the patents. Taking a quick look at the patents, you may realize that universities in Canada file many patents every year and they own many patents. Actually, the OECD says that Canada is a good performer in university patents. If you look at the Canadian patents database, you will find that in 2012 Canadian universities were issued 58 patents. Only one of them, however, allowed a third party to license it. In the last three years, there have been over 100 patents issued to Canadian universities and only three made licences available.
My point is that you can develop as many patents as you want. But if you do not actively seek a third-party manufacturer or an entrepreneur to prototype it, test it, and bring it to market, it won't be commercialized. When you take into account that universities spend more than $10 billion a year in R and D, including more than $3 billion that comes from the federal government, most of it from taxpayers, it is nonsense that more efforts are not being put into licensing these patents.
We believe that all patents granted to universities or professors should automatically make licences available in the database to any third party on a non-exclusive basis, if possible, and that universities should actively promote these licences in the private sector.
I would also agree with Mr. Gupta that our associations could be helpful to universities in pushing the dissemination of this information through our respective members.
My third point is about business R and D, particularly the tax environment in which businesses compete as they perform R and D.
From a basic economic perspective, businesses maximize their investment in R and D if, one, they make profits, and, two, they compete in an environment where taxes maximize their cashflow.
On the profitability side, we're not the sector that has made the most profit in the last 10 years. Since 2001, the annual average revenue growth in our sector has been 0.3%, which is the second lowest in all sectors of the economy.
However, some tax measures undertaken by all levels of governments, including the decrease in the CIT rate, of course R and D tax credits, federal and provincial, the accelerated capital cost allowance for machinery and equipment, and so on, have helped businesses going through rough times by maximizing the after-tax cashflow available, despite low revenues.
The changes proposed to the SR and ED tax credit, first, are a huge concern for our members. It's more particularly the reduction of 5% in the rate for large businesses, and the elimination of capital expenditures from the tax base eligible for the tax credit, which are the two main concerns we hear more often from our members. The manufacturing sector accounts for 55% of all business R and D in the sector. Combined with Mr. Gupta's sector, we're about 90%. So of course we'll be among the most hit by these two measures. We're also very capital-intensive, I'd like to point out.
We estimate that all the proposed measures by the federal government in the SR and ED tax credit will reduce the R and D tax incentives in Canada by $750 million a year, starting in 2016-17 when all the measures are implemented. According to our latest management issues survey, 69% of our respondents said that as a result of these changes they will reduce R and D spending in Canada, while another 20% said they will start to look at other jurisdictions to see what kinds of tax credits they offer for R and D.
Talking about other jurisdictions, this week we published a report that compared the R and D tax credits for large companies across the OECD and some other emerging markets. We found that the international competitiveness of our R and D tax credit will fall from number 13 to number 17, just as a result of the 5% decrease in the investment tax credit rate. What is even more of a concern than the actual rank is to look at the countries that will now be ahead of us. We're talking about countries like Brazil, China, and Turkey, which not only offer bigger market size and lower labour costs, but they will now offer a more generous tax credit for R and D.
These are our concerns. I thank you for inviting me, and now I will shut up.