Thank you.
There's a lot to be said. Obviously, this is an industry that has had its challenges, but we, I think, have responded effectively as a government over the years to the challenges of Canada's auto industry. Of course, the Canadian taxpayers were very generous to the auto industry during the recession. The money has come back from those firms, largely. It is a real challenge, particularly when you counterbalance that with what we're facing in the United States. When the dollar is near par, that creates a real stress and challenge for Canadian industry. When, frankly, straight-up corporate welfare.... As the Government of Canada we have the automotive innovation fund, which is a repayable loan that is taxable, and it comes back to Canadian taxpayers.
There was an example in the state of Kentucky, just the one state, where $700 million in cash and a greenfield site were offered to an auto assembly-manufacturing plant to go to the state of Kentucky. That is a policy with which we should not and cannot compete as a country. What we can do is other things that are, in my view, more fiscally responsible, are more conservative, and more effective.
First is that we sign the Canada-Europe trade agreement, CETA, the Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement. CETA will create 500 million new customers for any automobile that's manufactured in Canada. That's an advantage for an auto assembler-manufacturer in Canada, which does not exist in the United States.
Canada has a 13% lower corporate tax rate here than they have in the United States. We also have, frankly, socialized medicine in Canada, a financial burden on firms in the United States that doesn't exist in Canada, which is a big economic advantage.
We have an educated and thoughtful workforce in Canada. You look at the Brampton plants of Chrysler and others that are operating past 100% full capacity, and they're turning out phenomenal, award-winning products around the world. Add to that the fact that we're twinning the Detroit-Windsor border crossing. We have the beyond the border initiative so that cars that are manufactured in Canada have easier access to the United States.
You take all those things together—support through the recession, lower taxes, the European free trade deal, advantages on social programs and training, making the border more seamless with the United States—all of that taken together, plus the automotive innovation fund, creates a very effective package of public policies that support industry, versus what's happening in Mexico or versus what's happening in the United States, where they're driving forward with greenfield sites, straight corporate welfare, driving to “right to work” states, in a way that frankly we can't compete with in Canada, and we ought not to, certainly on the financial side.
We have our challenges with the auto industry. It will continue to be a file that we'll have to watch going forward, but there are some good stats. The auto industry posted its best April sales ever with a 4% jump this year from April of last year. Chrysler recorded a rise in sales of 6%, its best April in over a quarter of a century. Nissan Canada posted a 30% sales gain in April. So we do have some good news from the auto sector. We're going to continue to be challenged because of the dynamic in the United States, but we'll react effectively because it's a critical part of the Canadian economy.