Honourable members, thank you for your invitation. It's a real privilege to be here, as it was to be a member of the expert group.
With that privilege goes a lot of responsibility, so I felt very responsible to try to keep in touch with what has been going on. It has been very heartening to see that some of our recommendations are indeed being acted on. We can't say that we did it, but we hope we were contributors to the process, part of the partnership of change.
I thought that this morning I would concentrate a little more on gender budgets and reiterate some of what we said in our annex H of this report, and perhaps expand a little on it. When I expand a little on it, I'm expanding from my personal experience, not from the work that we did in the expert group.
I had been, many years ago, Canada's director for setting up the women in development program, now the gender program, at the Commonwealth Secretariat, and I took a lot of the initial steps that have led us to gender budgeting, particularly in Commonwealth countries, so I'll try to share a little bit of that. When I answer questions, it will be from that perspective. As well, as a consultant, I have worked in countries where we've been trying to do gender budgeting.
First of all, this is just a reminder that even though you've been talking to many groups that talk about women's budgets, what we recommended was not a women's budget that was separate from a men's budget, but a budget that was analyzed in a way that allowed people to identify the potential impact of any measure on both men and women and the equality of men and women. If we remember that gender is not really a shielded way of saying women and men, it's a comparative analytic tool. It's relational. What we want to look at is what happens to men, what happens to women, and within that, what happens to old men and young men and old women and young women and little girls and little boys. It's a tool for identifying what happens to people and where you might be able to introduce change. So when you speak to the groups that talk about women's budgeting, I think in Canada we're doing something a little different.
Also, as Georgina has said, we felt that the Speech from the Throne and the budget exercise annually were two of the most important central policy planks in the way we govern ourselves, in the way we allocate resources, so we wanted to make certain the tracking of those resources was adequate. What we're seeing now is that gender-based budgeting is really being used as a tool to lift the blinkers from people's eyes so they can understand that tracking, so that the gender-based analysis is a tool for gender budgeting. We don't have to introduce a whole new system. The system's already there; it's just a case of anchoring it very specifically.
So I think we've actually made quite a few very good steps, and I congratulate you on the work you've been doing to keep the flame alive, and also on the very hard work that Status of Women is doing with gender-based budgeting and serving the departments in that way.
The second point I wanted to make relates to gender-based analysis. We have made a comment saying that technical knowledge is so important. I was very interested to see Treasury Board come to you and say, “Well, we now have a Treasury Board boot camp where we put people through this”, and this is exactly what we were talking about.
Gender analysis, gender-based analysis, is not something that comes from the moon. It's not rocket science, but it does need to be grounded in some technical competence. It looks as though there is, anchored within our government systems, at least an attempt to try to gain that technical competence.
One of the things we talked about, which you will have seen emerging from your discussions with a variety of players on gender budgeting around the world, is that, for instance, the Scottish women's group and the groups in San Francisco and in a number of other areas are non-governmental organizations. We had made a very strong recommendation about supporting the voluntary sector and about the need for creating a partnership with civil society, because it's vital for monitoring and it's vital for accountability. In the end, the accountability of any government is to the people, and civil society is the people.
It's very important that this partnership be enhanced and that organizations be enabled to make the kind of insightful--critical sometimes, but usually helpful--comments about the direction. The end-user of services and goods and anything else you want to deliver in the budget should be able to feed back whether or not it's actually reaching.... Have we done a good job? Have we not done a good job? I think that would be very important.
If you're going to do that, research is very important. I noticed when I looked at the Status of Women budget that a lot of their research capacity has been cut. There seems to have been a decrease in the amount of research funds that are available--and I think probably not just from Status of Women--to bring civil society evidence-based data back to the table, back to you so that you can reflect on it. That gap may give problems in terms of ultimate accountability. I think it's something that needs to be looked at.
I know that Status of Women had been doing some research on gender equality indicators, and I would urge that this is very important. You need those indicators to set up a ranking system so that you know what you're doing. You may know where you want to go, but it gives you an idea of where the potential impact needs to be. Those indicators will also help you identify whether you're there. I would urge a lot of support for the creation, with various departments, of the relevant gender equality indicators, depending on what end policy requires those to be.
Although we can see that the central agencies--Treasury Board, Finance, and the Privy Council--have begun to take on board some of the concerns and recommendations we made, there is one area that's still very important, and globally it's still the central issue, and that is political will. In terms of accountability, somewhere in the PMO there needs to be a responsive mechanism, something that we feel comes out saying, “This is what's important, and we want to make sure all of you recognize that this is important.” We notice that we haven't seen anything in the Speech from the Throne that says gender equality is important.
Political support, although it's there within the bureaucracy and it's there systemically, I think also needs to be signalled from the highest levels, and I really haven't seen that yet. It's one of the issues that are being discussed globally. The world is asking how we entrap political will. It's all very well for us to effect the systems to bring about change, but that has to be partnered at the top.