Mr. Speaker, it is now my turn to speak on this infamous report of the Liberal finance committee on the GST. I have worked very hard on this matter from the very beginning, along with my colleagues from Saint-Hyacinthe and Charlevoix.
When we first saw the draft report, we were extremely disappointed to see the direction in which the Liberals were heading after all the public hearings, because no one had suggested as an alternative that an integrated tax be introduced. Just try to explain to people now contending with two different taxation systems that the existing GST is going to be replaced by a relatively similar mechanism!
Government members roundly criticized this tax when it was first introduced and continued to do so during the election campaign. The Prime Minister said it was a bad tax, and so did the Deputy Prime Minister who even said she would resign if the GST was not abolished. The Minister of Foreign Affairs and all the Liberal members said it was a bad tax, and now they are asking the provinces to do away with their own tax and replace it with the GST. This is scandalous, Mr. Speaker. After criticizing this as a bad measure, now the government wants to extend it to everything. This makes no sense.
Furthermore, the government wants to broaden the tax base so that the tax will now apply to food, pharmaceutical products and health care. In addition to using strong-arm tactics where the provinces are concerned, the government boasts of wanting to simplify the system for small businesses. I want to touch on this point a little further because up until now, this issue has gone relatively unnoticed. Once again, the government is merely throwing up a smokescreen and I will explain why.
The report says that businesses with earnings of $200,000 or less will be able to use the business transfer tax system. However, the government does not want to call this tax by its real name, preferring instead to call it a VAT. This tax is nothing but a GST hybrid, an added value tax, if you will. This must be clearly understood. Businesses with earnings of $200,000 or less are being told: Now all you have to do is take the sales total, subtract from it your purchases and file an annual report". What they are not being told, however, what the report does not have the courage to say, is that throughout the year, until they file their report, businesses will have to use an accounting method which takes into consideration taxable and tax-free purchases,
as well as taxable and tax-free sales. This is exactly what they must now do with the current GST.
What will happen? Until now, small businesses could use the so-called quick method to calculate the amount of GST. So how will the new system be different? Most likely, it will be worse than the quick method which was not used very much. The government probably should have pushed the quick method more and not changed anything in this regard. But it did not, Mr. Speaker.
The report contends that the new system will be simpler for 80 to 90 per cent of small and medium-sized businesses. Lest we forget, businesses with earnings of $500,000 and over account for 94 per cent of all sales in Canada. What does this represent for Conservatives, in terms of change? Ninety-four per cent of sales will still be subject to the same GST. However, small businesses which account for the remaining 6 per cent of sales will have to contend with a more complicated system.
When they get wind of this proposal, they are going to react very strongly. Let me give you four cases where the new system will prove to be more complicated. To digress, the report is rather non-committal when it says that maybe the door should be left open even for businesses with earnings of between $200,000 and $500,000. On this point, they changed their minds in mid course. The final version says that this could perhaps be an option for businesses with earnings of between $220,000 and $500,000.
Think of it, Mr. Speaker. A firm could sell some products that are taxed and others that are not. But whether the report tells us that they do or do not want to tax food, there will still be exceptions.
If there are any exceptions, how will firms with sales of $200,000 or less be able to have a simplified system if they sell different types of products? What happens if these firms expand? What will happen to a firm with sales of $400,000 that hopes to achieve growth, which is a universal goal in business? When that firm's sales top the $500,000 mark, it will be forced to change its accounting and taxation systems. This is a terrible outrage!
Companies will have to decide which system is most profitable for them. They will spend their time trying to decide between the business transfer tax and the goods and services tax. And they will see that these are relatively similar systems, so they will probably prefer to keep the GST. Many firms will prefer to stick with the GST. If the threshold is set at $200,000, it is even worse. What change? Most firms with projected growth will not change to another system. Firms engaged in interprovincial trade-the provinces will still have differing rates, and it should not be assumed that there will be a uniform rate across Canada-will have to take sales and purchases made in other provinces into consideration in their accounting.
This translates into still more new accounting for these firms. The claim is that now these small firms could, in their annual income tax returns, manage to provide the desired statements. But they will not be able to; they will have to continue keeping daily accounting records. Furthermore, they cannot claim the tax credit for purchases from non-registrants-that is, people or businesses with sales of $30,000 or less who are not obliged to register for the GST. So special accounting records will have to be kept for that purpose as well.
And this is the simplified system for small businesses? Is this it? It is a dog's breakfast. There is no way in the world that this will be simpler. People are being taken for something they are not when they are told things like this.
There are a number of things I want to say in the few minutes left to me. Easier to manage says the report in one of its objectives. Easier for whom? For the government? Do you think that the present staff at Revenue Canada will be able to handle the introduction of this new business transfer tax, a tax of which many small businesses will probably never avail themselves. They will nonetheless investigate the possibility. They will need information. People will have to be hired to provide this information. And after that, the tax will have to be administered.
Since the GST will still be widely used, people will continue to be needed to run that system. Administration costs, which are already high -at least $600 million-are likely to increase. What a mess! What a waste! That is what the Liberal GST is about. Is this the kind of improvement the Liberals have in mind? The public will never go for that, never!
It will not be easier or simpler for businesses either. Someone mentioned the tax credit for low-income individuals earlier. This aspect has been debated vigorously here as well as elsewhere. Huge petitions were brought in, petitions that said the tax credit had to be indexed, that it was wrong to impose a regressive tax. Now, in this report, they do not even have the courage to state that, if a value added tax must be maintained, tax credits for low-income individuals will have to be indexed yearly.
The rate of inflation will not remain as low as it is forever. There will be years when it will be higher. If the economy grows, so will inflation. But the credits will remain the same. In time, the gap will grow. Also, this tax is a hidden tax. We are told that it will not be, that the amount will be shown on bills. That is not true, not at all, because bills could simply mention that the total amount includes a tax of such and such a percentage.
Can you imagine small businesses figuring out their purchase price and the tax paid? They are going to have to take the total amount, take out their calculators, divide all those figures, reprogram their computers-What a nightmare! It is a real nightmare. That is the Liberal GST? That is the improvement the Liberals had promised? Are they true to their commitment? The public will not be fooled. That is not what they had promised. They are in breach of an election promise, and this is a major breach too!
We are proposing an alternative. We are offering them an alternative. The world must have gone crazy, when the opposition offers ways to fulfil a government commitment. We told them, "If you want to abolish the GST, there is only one solution: to abolish it and leave this area of taxation to the provinces. Of course, there will be less revenue, but you can then tinker with the transfers to the provinces, especially in areas where there is a lot of duplication". Reducing overlap is also one of the goals stated in the red book. You could achieve several goals at the same time.
You are signalling to me that I do not have much time left, Mr. Speaker, so I will conclude by quoting from an article by Michel Vastel, a renowned Parliament Hill journalist, that appeared in this morning's newspaper: "Another solution mentioned by the committee"- which did not look at it because it was apparently not its mandate-"and recommended by the Bloc is to abolish the GST and make up for the shortfall by abolishing transfers to the provinces".
He goes on to say, "They would then eliminate at once a lot of duplication and a bunch of public servants. All this is obviously too simple and dangerous for a federal government that wants to raise its profile". He could have added, "that craves absolute power and control and constantly tries to confront the provinces". That is why the Premier of Ontario compares them to a gorilla. I would be ashamed to be compared to a gorilla, and by a Premier no less! But he is right. The people of Ontario should listen to their Premier because he is handling this very well.
I will conclude by saying that they are reneging on their election commitment and that the people of Quebec and Canada will never let them get away with it.