Mr. Speaker, I am delighted to enter into this debate. This is an important bill even though it appears, as my colleague opposite indicated, to be a purely regulatory type of bill that tends to condense a lot of the difficulties, bureaucracies and regulations that are appended to the Department of Industry.
This is an important function nonetheless. It is important because the country desperately needs a Department of Industry that is fine tuned, well honed and whose processes for decision making are adapted to the conditions of the day, conditions that require immediate action that addresses the problems as they have emerged over the course of the last 10 years.
I say the last 10 years because some of my colleagues here are more familiar with the tradition of the last administration that stretched from 1984 to only 1993. However, in the latter part of that administration we saw the devastation of the economic dynamics of this country. It is the economic dynamics of this country that a bill such as C-46 addresses today.
It addresses these because the directions of the previous administration allowed forces of an economic nature to pull this country apart and to weaken the dynamics that allowed even on a regional basis for some growth, for some wealth and, I dare say for my colleagues on the Reform side of the House, for some fiscal generation so that we could either maintain programs on a national basis or at least support and continue programs that we felt were of a need from a regional point of view.
Let me give some examples. I come from that part of Canada which people love to hate but which is also very important to the economic vibrancy of the entire country and whose citizens have very dedicatedly and very willingly contributed to the consolidated general revenues of this country and have also done their utmost to engender that spirit of thrift, sacrifice and risk that comes with the responsibilities of those who would live in a country dominated by an entrepreneurial spirit.
The greater metropolitan area of Toronto, an area which I know, Mr. Speaker, you are quite familiar with, used to provide close to 40 per cent of all the revenues gathered from the consolidated general revenue fund. Some of my colleagues from the Reform side, not having had the glasses to adapt them to a larger vision of the country, might not appreciate that, but it is true.
Even in such a place the devastation and inadequacies of a government imposed on the economy saw, for example, the labour force go from 2,022,000 in 1989 at the end of the boom to 1,984,000 last year. In the process we saw employment drop from 1,934,000 to a mere 1,755,000. These are statistics dated at the end of December 1993.
What is interesting about that is not only the drop in the labour force but the increase in the unemployment. Unemployment went from 81,000 in Canada's richest city in 1989 to 222,000 this last December-222,000 unemployed.
For some of my colleagues who have a rose coloured glass view of the world, that is a population that exceeds almost all cities except the top six in population in this country. It exceeds the number of unemployed in most of the regions in this country. To make matters worse, the kind of dynamics that were unleashed by the last administration, the welfare cases rose to 672,000 in that same area and welfare payments ballooned, as one can imagine.
What we need-the Canadian public told us this in 1993-is a government that is structured such as to be able to address the needs of Canadians wherever they might choose to live in this country, and make that an absolute certainty, that it is where they choose to live.
If we are Canadians one of the hallmarks of our identity is that we have mobility and our country must be governed by a government that is willing to address not only our aspirations and our objectives and our needs, but also the development as we move along. We are not a country that pits one region against another. We need government instruments that allow us to address the needs as expressed on an ongoing basis, capable of meeting the changes that we see the world economy and our domestic economy impose on families, groupings, communities, cities, provinces and regions.
As my colleague from Bruce-Grey said a moment ago in a most eloquent fashion and a most precise fashion when he gave some specific examples of the potential that has yet to be exploited, one of the objectives of new Department of Industry, after it is structured, will be to highlight tourism.
Our Department of Industry has recognized that the current account deficit that we hold with the world cannot continue at the rate that we currently see. It is especially onerous on the tourism side because this country has enormous potential for tourism development, and yet we have very few programs that target the tourists emerging in various places around the world. For example, we do not have adequate programs to address the emerging tourism potential of western Europe or even the vastly and quickly growing tourism potential of Asia.
We see that if we are going to allow Canadians to look for a more aggressive future, one that promises fiscal security, monetary security and aspirations for our young people and for families, what we would have to do is take a look at where the jobs are being created. In some of the statistics I gave we could see that while there has been a decline in manufacturing not only in my own region of Ontario and the city of Toronto but virtually everywhere in this country unfortunately, what we have experienced at the same time is a growth in the service sector. There is no better sector than the tourism sector.
In the area of tourism we find that about 50 per cent more jobs are created in non-tourism related industries and businesses. These are not Canadian statistics, these are studies that come out of the OECD. This is an area where other countries have found similar experiences.
If we are going to build on something that is tangible, something that is there, we ought to take advantage of the natural beauty of this country, the natural resources that it offers from a tourism point of view and we ought to be able to marshall an industry that allows us to provide jobs today and tomorrow for a country that yearns for those days when it was realizing its potential. Those days can come again. We must take the appropriate measures to put the right structures and procedures into place, and this bill is one. I urge all members to support it.