Thank you, Mr. Chair.
In its report on public accounts, which our esteemed chair tabled in the House a few weeks ago, the committee adopted the recommendation that consideration be given to the possibility of Crown corporations releasing their financial statements and disclosing their expenditures like departments do.
Also, last week, the Commissioner of the Environment and Sustainable Development expressed support for Crown corporations disclosing their GHG emissions like departments do under the green government strategy. A number of issues are raising questions about Crown corporations being unwilling to accept accountability. We're looking to discuss how to improve Crown corporations' transparency and what accounting reforms are necessary. The thought process has begun.
Let's go back to the OECD report on transparency and accountability. I believe Mr. Hayes gave the example of the United Kingdom. In the U.K., the departments responsible for Crown corporations do indeed disclose their revenue, expenditures and assets, along with Crown Corporation expenditures. They provide exactly the same amount of detail as the departments.
I have other examples of good practices. In Korea, the Ministry of Economy and Finance is responsible for monitoring information released by state-owned enterprises, and the ministry can issue penalties for SOEs that omit information. Here, a new unit could be established in the Department of Finance.
In the Netherlands, SOEs are listed in order of transparency, and in Finland, a report on all SOEs is released annually. It includes the SOEs' investment portfolio, net worth, financial statements, and executive salaries. Basically, many countries do that.