Thank you very much for the opportunity to appear before the parliamentary committee on the status of women.
While I'm a professor here at the University of Victoria, I should note that I did spend 30 years in Ottawa working in the federal government. I was assistant deputy minister in a number of departments, including HRDC. I worked in the Privy Council Office. I was assistant deputy minister in Fisheries and Oceans, and I've also worked in the Treasury Board.
In those jobs I did have opportunities to be engaged quite intimately in the development of budgets, both as a big spender in HRDC and as a fiscal guardian in the Treasury Board. So I'm particularly happy to be here this morning, and I will limit my comments to under 10 minutes in order to provide time for questions.
I understand that the committee will be calling witnesses from the central agencies, particularly Treasury Board, Finance, and the Privy Council Office, in the future to examine this relationship between the question of gender-based analysis and budgeting, which I think is an important topic.
I think we should remind ourselves at the beginning about the fundamental nature of the budgetary process and how one can increasingly ensure that other inputs and other aspects affect the budgets.
Let's remember that the budget is fundamentally an analytical process as well as very much a political process. We have certainly seen that in the budget that came down a couple of days ago as well as in all budget processes.
Let's also remember that when we look at budgets we really want to look at both the expenditure side and the tax side. Both of those sides do have major implications and ramifications with respect to gender. They have differential impacts, depending upon what those measures might be, on the expenditure side and on the tax side--differential impacts in terms of impacts on men and women in various policies.
One way to think about the budgetary process and one way to think about gender-based analysis and how it fits into the process is that in any budget there are, of course, many actors. So one must think not just in terms of who the guardians are, primarily the Department of Finance and the Treasury Board, but also think in terms of the spending and advocate departments and how gender-based analysis and implications can focus on them.
As well, there are of course the priority setters, and they are having increased influence on the budget. These are basically those individuals who reside in and around the Prime Minister's Office and the Privy Council Office who are impacting at the front end of the budget process and affecting very much what those priorities may well be. So that becomes very important.
Another point just to observe is that as much as we would like to think that budgeting is totally comprehensive and that each year in the budget governments look at and examine the whole base of the budgets, the reality is that budgeting is fundamentally incremental.
If we look at the budget from two days ago, we see that while the government is spending $244 billion, the amount of new allocations in one year is only about $1.5 billion, and that's really where all the focus and all the attention is directed. So in the fundamental question of looking at broader expenditure policies, or for that matter, all of public policy, the tendency is oftentimes just to look at the increment. We need to examine the fundamental base as well. That's a huge and very difficult challenge, and I can come to that again.
The last point--and I think it's good news for gender-based analysis--is the fundamental fact that budgets are attempting to become more performance oriented. We are trying to look at the performance of budgets, what results we get from them, and what the impacts are that become part of it.
I think this is where gender-based analysis can fit in, because we know that budgets can differentially impact on different genders, male or female, and on different groups within those gender classifications. As we begin to look at budgeting more in terms of performance, in terms of what outcomes and outputs and results we achieve from those, we can begin to look at the various policy analysis that's required.
My line on this whole area of gender-based analysis and linking it to budgeting is that we need to see gender-based analysis as a fundamental part of this policy analysis. Really, the whole idea is to do your homework in advance of actually announcing and in advance of actually deciding on what these new expenditure or tax initiatives might be, and to ensure that this is not done in isolation but that it becomes a fundamental part of what one looks at in terms of public policy.
Any public policy analyst in the government working on budgets or on policy issues will be looking at many factors that go into a final decision with respect to a budget initiative, be it on a question like income splitting, changes in EI, changes in health care policy, changes in various initiatives in transportation, or whatever. The impacts will be multiple, and there will be a great number of them. The impact it will have on various genders will only be one of many factors, all of which need to be weighed and analyzed, and hopefully all of which will lead to better-informed decision-making.
My own sense, from reading the reports and from my research, into where things are in Ottawa.... Let's remember that gender-based analysis was basically put in place about 10 years ago in a formalized way within the Government of Canada. The general view, from my perspective, is that we probably have enough rules and enough procedures around this activity. I think what we need now are more incentives.
My own sense is that gender-based analysis needs to be viewed as an initiative to facilitate productive and informed interaction among key players, whether in the policy-making process, the legislative process, a regulatory process, or in this case in a budgetary process. I don't think this is something that can be undertaken simply by a special unit within various organizations, be it in the Treasury Board, the Privy Council Office, or line departments.
Nor do I think we should be spending excessive amounts of time trying endless coordination exercises across government to coordinate these various units. I don't think the emphasis in gender-based analysis should be to ask for more coordination and action plans, and I don't think we should be focusing as much on how we monitor to see whether this is being done.
There is a fair amount of work, from what I gather, with the current requirement within the Treasury Board that any Treasury Board submission requires that a gender-based analysis be undertaken, and that of course it also be required in general ways in the submissions related to MCs.
I think what you want to avoid in the long run is the check-off list, the view that after the decision has been taken we can check off the list to see whether there was in fact a gender-based analysis. What you really want to do is to ensure that it's integrated into the decision-making process and becomes a part, along with many other factors, that weigh into decisions.
If I have one word of caution, it is not to make gender-based analysis so special and so precious that it becomes fundamentally isolated within government. It needs to be integrated within things.
This brings me to two final comments that I simply want to make.
To do this, leadership is absolutely critical if one wants to integrate this kind of analysis, work, and sensitivity within the policy and decision-making processes of government. It requires leadership at the highest political levels, and certainly the leadership by the Prime Minister becomes fundamental. Whom he or she chooses as his minister for the status of women, for example, makes a fundamental difference, and how that minister for the status of women actually operates, and whether he or she is generally perceived as a strong minister—and oftentimes they are not the most senior ministers within the government, although they are very skilled people.
It makes a difference, when issues go before a cabinet committee or to cabinet, if the minister for the status of women or some other minister asks the fundamental question whether there has been a gender-based analysis done of this policy issue. When those sorts of things happen, people listen. Senior public servants listen, and other ministers listen. Certainly when a minister is supported by the Prime Minister—not just through a mandate letter to have this undertaken, but supported verbally and supported up and down in their profession and in their work to ensure that these things are undertaken—that can make a difference.
I think it also makes a difference when, as in the case of the previous minister, the Minister of Finance makes a public undertaking to undertake gender-based analysis.
What I'm getting at is that leadership is important; it's not just what the manuals say and not just what the documents say.
Leadership, of course, is also important at the public service level, and that requires strong working relationships among the deputy ministers, the assistant deputy ministers, and the central agencies to ensure that this gets its proper place within things.
Lastly, there has to be a demand for things. I think the tendency in so much of this is to work so much on the supply of it as to forget about the demand.
Kevin Lynch, the Clerk of the Privy Council and Secretary to the Cabinet, gave a very interesting speech the other day. He talked about the fact that there might not be enough emphasis now on the demand side for public policy coming from the public service, recognizing that it comes from many, many sources. So working on the demand for good analysis, any strong minister, any strong department, clearly wants to know the ramifications of what they're doing, be it a tax policy...[Technical difficulty--Editor]
Let me just conclude, Madam Chairman, with a couple of comments at the conceptual level.
I think the words matter. A former Prime Minister once said, “The words make a difference,” and I think we need to get the concepts right when it comes to gender-based analysis.
First of all, we've been using words, as I read them, called “gender budgets” and “gender budgeting”. I think we should be careful with the use of those words.
If we look at the budget from the other day, I wouldn't consider that to be a gender budget. I wouldn't consider it to be gender budgeting. There are many other factors that go into budgets. To call a budget a gender budget, I think, is a bit of misnomer as to what is in it, because there are many other factors. And it can also be from the point of view of the fiscal guardians in the system who are looking at many other factors: interest rates, investment, impact on aboriginal peoples, impact on homelessness, what it's doing for climate change, what's happening with our northern expenditures, what implications this has for national unity, what implications this has for big cities, small cities, rural municipalities, etc. There are many, many factors, and to simply call it a gender budget or gender budgeting, I think we should be careful with that.
I will also simply note that I see that the term “gender auditing” has now crept into the nomenclature. I think that's quite an interesting topic, and I'll just leave it at that.
With the more recent terminology that I've seen, called “gender-based budgets” and “gender-responsive budgets”, once again I think we should be careful. To say that a budget is gender based is a factor and it's one of the inputs into the budget, but I think it's a far cry to say that all budgets ought to be necessarily gender based. There are many other factors that will enter into the budget.
What I would like to see is a gender-informed budget, a budget that is informed by analysis, informed by priorities, informed by dialogue, informed by thought, and informed by debate, so that the gender implications of what is being done are looked at, analyzed, thought about, and brought to bear in the budget.
So I just raise that in terms of the kind of terminology being important in the way we think about our budgets and this important matter of gender in society.
Let me stop there, Madam Chairman. I don't want to take up any more of the time, because I know questions are important to the committee.