Thank you very much. It's a pleasure to be here.
As a contribution to the committee's considerations, in my 10-minute introduction, I hope to cover some of the underlying factors that may be promoting growth in the social finance sector; provide some discussion about how social finance works, and the benefits, particularly considering how it relates to crime prevention in Canada; and also maybe provide the committee with some knowledge and information from a market sounding that Deloitte has conducted.
I have French and English copies here, which you may avail yourselves of. My comments will probably be at a sufficiently high level that you do not need to follow on, but I'll certainly leave them with you if that's helpful.
To start, I'm a partner from Deloitte, based in Toronto, and I have looked at private finance and how it assists infrastructure development and the impact that it's having on social service delivery in Canada.
If you look at some of the underlying factors that are increasing the growth of social finance globally right now—and Canada is not a market leader in this area, I dare say, but will likely migrate to being so—governments are facing very difficult fiscal challenges and they are making choices among various priorities, so accessing outside capital and funding can help them meet additional priorities and meet additional needs of the taxpayer.
When we look at taxpayers, they're expecting more these days. They're expecting more issues to be addressed, they're expecting more accessibility to government services, and they're expecting higher levels of achievement.
If you look at some of the societal problems and how they're being addressed versus how they've been addressed traditionally, traditionally taxpayers and citizens looked to the government to solve a lot of society's problems that now are often being solved by the private sector. This may involve an economic return but also benefits them. They are looking for opportunities to earn economic benefits, but also to improve their brand, to be an instigator of social change and improvement, and contribute to the community.
If we look at that, and take a social finance example like a social impact bond, when you think about how that works, government finds a social objective that it believes it has considered and intervenes to improve that social objective. It brings an intermediary to bring forward service providers that can be of all types, and funders of the intervention—the funders potentially being private sector—and brings them together so that ultimately the cost of the intervention provided and the return to the investor are less than the economic benefit that's achieved by cost savings and cost avoidance across potentially all levels of government and across all departments.
We certainly see this in crime prevention where certain responsibilities are municipal, like policing; certain responsibilities are federal, like corrections at some levels; and certain responsibilities are provincial.
Considering some of the benefits, if you look at the benefits to government one of the key benefits is that it unlocks a new source of private funding. It allows government to access the innovative solutions that sometimes come with those sources of funding. They not only come with money, but with ideas about how to ameliorate the social problem, if you will.
Social impact bonds in particular are a system where government pays only for successful outcomes, and that's a very powerful tool.
Typically in programs like this, the results are clearly demonstrated to the public. That's usually part of the good stewardship.
The service providers like this, because they are acquiring a source of funding that can be longer term and that allows them to plan better, to scale and mature as an organization, and to focus on performance metrics and measurements so they can assuredly meet their obligations, and then the investor can get paid.
I think the last thing I'd like to touch on is that in the fall of 2013, Deloitte and the MaRS Centre for Impact Investing looked at and consulted with 80 potential investors in the social finance market and found, across banks, credit unions, foundations, and benevolent individuals that they are prepared to participate in this market and are looking for opportunities. There's a high level of interest, and we're starting to see a high level of preparedness.
They are also willing to accept social intervention and government objectives that cut across the range of crime prevention, homelessness, and education, and they're very open to considering and thinking about how they can contribute to ameliorating problems across all those areas. They do see some challenges about working with government, about initial projects, and about the steep learning curve. However, they do know and appreciate that, over time, transaction costs and the knowledge transfer around this should become quite prevalent quite soon. We see this in other markets. They would like to participate as a consortium and they see the intermediary role as being very important to this.
But again, there's a high level of interest, and we're starting to see a high level of preparedness as they learn from international examples and look for a successful Canadian pilot, and a Canadian pilot project that they will be able to participate in.
That concludes my prepared comments.