It would be my pleasure.
Before I start going through this, because it can sound very lawyerly and picky, I think it's important to preface it by saying that I think we do need to address the protection of workers and we do need to think about the impacts of the ways the new economy plays out for them, particularly some structural effects that are affecting workers. I just believe that creating a wage-fixing provision is not going to contribute to that.
What worries me is that wage-fixing is being offered and being explained and justified as a way to protect workers, and the subtext, I believe, comes from the removal of the hero pay that was coordinated between the large grocery players back in 2020. That's a situation that's pretty unusual in terms of the typical kinds of cases that are looked at as wage-fixing in the United States, which is pretty much the only place that does treat wage-fixing criminally, and it's very recent, actually.
I guess my concern is that the criminal law was not designed to deal with unequal bargaining power or unfairness, and what is being criminalized is agreements among employers—not a term that is defined—with regard to fixing wages and with regard to the “no poaches”, which is limiting mobility. The way it does this is that it simply says that those practices in and of themselves are not a problem—so having low wages or restricting mobility is not really the problem—but it's just agreeing about it.
The difficulty, even if you accept that we want to go after employers who agree to do things together, is that the criminal law is not a remedial type of statute, so victims of criminal behaviour have a very small stature in the criminal law process. I have done a lot of research in corporate criminal liability, which is likely the area of law that will be brought into play, because many employers are “organizations” within the meaning of the criminal law. There, in terms of crafting restitution orders or corrective measures, there is very little evidence that there's going to be creativity, even though those powers exist, and if it's just a matter of imposing a big fine, I'm not sure that achieves much for workers.
I will tell you what my primary concern is for small businesses, however: It's that these criminal provisions look like they're there for big companies, but the reality of criminal law enforcement against companies in Canada under the Competition Act—except for large international cartels, which are led by the United States, by and large, and then we come in and tag along at the end—is that they're brought against smaller enterprises. I worry that in fact the practical impact of this provision is that the most likely cases that might be brought are against small and medium-sized enterprises, because it won't be possible or it will be a lot harder to bring cases against larger enterprises.
There are also a host of technical problems with this provision, but I think my central concern is that this should be dealt with by labour law. I don't understand why we think criminalizing a tiny bit of conduct is going to do much to help workers. Rather, it injects substantial uncertainty into section 45. In the unlikely event that prosecutors actually apply it—because I think they will have all kinds of good reasons to stay away from this provision, largely because there are so many undefined terms and so many weird things about it—I worry that it's not going to be applied against the types of employers that maybe the public has in their imagination.
I'm happy to go on, but I think that's probably enough.