Having only five minutes to spend on such a technical and important topic is torture.
Mr. Beaudoin, I will try to present the four issues I am concerned about.
I do not like the fact that deputy ministers are appearing. I like meeting with you, given your knowledge, but you have a mandate. I will be very critical, but I know that this is your mandate and that things are not always up to you.
Here is the first issue I am extremely worried about.
You develop an equation and say that it will be possible to determine the increase, since the best statistics will soon be available. Yet you yourself admitted that you did not have adequate statistics in 2007. If good data is available on one side and bad data is available on the other side, the improvement cannot be assessed. The statistics should have been adequate from the beginning to make it possible to measure the increase. I do not understand that.
Will you make sure to cover different categories this time? By that I mean computers, communications equipment, the use of software, presence on social networks—which are like another world—domestic and international online transactions. Those factors have a huge influence on tourism. As Ms. Peters must know, the SME sector is big. Are the manufacturing sector and the goods and services industry looked at separately? Both sectors consist of companies of fewer than 500 employees, but they are still very different. Are you planning to cover all those aspects when, in principle, the data will have been improved?
As for the connection between Canada Job Grant and SMEs, I would like you to check something. The manufacturers association has many chambers of commerce in the regions. However, their opinions on that initiative with regard to SMEs are very negative. If a program requires 15 electricians, companies like Bombardier will be successful, but SMEs are extremely critical of this program. A small company that needs an electrician will not always have the required $15,000. This information is not coming from me, but from most SMEs. They find the program to be ill-suited to their needs. So before we say that this is a wonderful solution, these issues need to be looked into. That's pretty important.
My third point has to do with how our results stack up against those achieved in the United States. You may say that our results are extremely good, but the U.S. is our neighbour and main competitor. Our figures in terms of communications equipment are at 28.6%. Do you have any idea why? Is access to tools in francophone sectors slowing things down so much? Why are we so behind? We can't even produce a third of what they do.
Some of the aspects—such as having a computer—are not so bad. We are at 80%. However, we are at 28% when it comes to communications equipment. Something is seriously wrong. Do we know what is at the root of this? I think it would be very important to find out.
I am getting to my last point, concerning the whole e-commerce field. We have to position ourselves much better in that area. The U.S. administration is considering overtaxing e-commerce. The logic behind that is to level the playing field, since real retailers have to pay taxes.
Are we ready to deal with that? What is Canada's position? What would be the impact of Canadian e-commerce? Should we follow the American lead?