Thank you, Madam Chair.
Thanks to the committee for its invitation.
I am here today alongside my colleagues Andrew Marsland, Senior Assistant Deputy Minister of Tax Policy, and Maude Lavoie, Director General, Business Income Tax at Finance Canada.
As you know, the Department of Finance remains focused on supporting Canadians and Canadian businesses through the COVID-19 pandemic. And that is why I welcome this report from the Auditor General.
The Canada emergency wage subsidy is one of the strongest pillars of government support that was established in the early days of the pandemic.
The wage subsidy program was initially designed to keep employees attached to their employer by subsidizing 75% of their payroll costs, up to a maximum of $847 per employee per week. It acts to protect jobs, encourages employers to rehire workers previously laid off as a result of the COVID crisis, and helps position Canadian businesses for a robust recovery. Through this initiative, well over five million Canadian employees have had their jobs supported, with over $74 billion paid out through the program as of April 11, 2021.
Through the budget that we delivered this week, we proposed that this subsidy continue until the end of September 2021, alongside the Canada emergency rent subsidy and the lockdown support. We also proposed to gradually decrease the subsidy rate, beginning in July, to ensure an orderly phase-out. However, of course that depends entirely on the state of the pandemic and the progress with respect to vaccinations.
In addition to the wage subsidy program, we also introduced a new program in the budget. We've called it the “Canada recovery hiring program”, and it's to help businesses hire more workers between June 6 and November 20, 2021, as we begin a turn from protecting jobs to creating jobs. It will offer companies on the wage subsidy, as they begin opening up, a new alternative: a program to assist them by offsetting a portion of the costs of bringing in new employees.
Ms. Hogan’s audit focused on whether Finance Canada provided analysis on the wage subsidy during its initial development. I am pleased to note the audit’s conclusion that the department worked within short timeframes to provide decision makers with information to assist them in developing the wage subsidy, and that it subsequently provided sound and complete analysis to inform adjustments to the program.
In the department’s work in designing the wage subsidy, it collaborated with the Canada Revenue Agency to assess how the program could be implemented quickly and develop the legislation related to the subsidy. The analysis was done rapidly. The imperative at that time was to get help to our workers and businesses quickly. And it was the right imperative.
Finance Canada also proposed subsequent adjustments to the subsidy that were informed by sound and complete analysis, as well as input from businesses and employers. For example, revisions to the program made the subsidy accessible to a broader range of employers by including those with a revenue decline of less than 30%, and providing a gradually decreasing base subsidy to all qualifying employers.
Although, Madam Chair, I was obviously not in the Department of Finance at the time, I do want to say that I think the agility that our department demonstrated in the design of this program, and in particular the department's willingness and effectiveness to constantly assess feedback from stakeholders and program recipients and to constantly find opportunities to make adjustments and to improve the reach and rigour of the program, are important and very much worth noting.
As I mentioned a moment ago, we also very much welcome the Auditor General's recommendation to publish an economic evaluation of the wage subsidy program. Doing that is indeed our plan, and we've committed to undertaking this evaluation and publishing our findings in the 2022 report on federal tax expenditures.
Before I wrap up, I do want to—and again, I say this as someone who wasn't there at the time—give full credit to the public servants both in the Department of Finance and in the Canada Revenue Agency for a really extraordinary effort to design this program and to deliver it rapidly at a time of real economic and social crisis for the country. I think that speaks well of their dedication as public servants to Canada.
I'll stop there. Thank you again for the invitation. My colleagues and I will be happy to try to answer your questions.