House of Commons Hansard #152 of the 35th Parliament, 1st Session. (The original version is on Parliament's site.) The word of the day was billion.

Topics

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11:50 a.m.

Reform

Leon Benoit Reform Vegreville, AB

Madam Speaker, I have a question for the hon. member for Willowdale.

The hon. member talked about this government's commitment to balancing the budget and he talked about the target of its very weak goal of 3 per cent of GDP in three years.

The interesting thing about that is it is a moving target. It has been much more rapidly moving than economic growth. The government started out talking about $22 billion. Lately the talk has been of $25 billion. It is a rapidly moving target.

The hon. member talked about economic growth and how it has been much higher than what was forecast. The interesting thing is that although economic growth has been much higher than forecasts I have not seen an acceleration in the reduction of the deficit to correspond with this income which was not anticipated.

I would like to ask the hon. member why there has not been a reduction in the three year target to correspond with the unexpected increase in growth.

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11:55 a.m.

Liberal

Jim Peterson Liberal Willowdale, ON

Madam Speaker, I am pleased to respond to that. All Canadians need an answer.

The member is right. Our growth in Canada has been higher than the norm that was set out, the target that was set out, the standard that was set out in the finance minister's economic analysis. All of us on all sides of the House I believe are pleased that our growth has been this vigorous. It means we are creating more jobs. It means we have unemployment down from over 11 per cent when we took office to under 10 per cent now. This is very encouraging because the reason we have to meet deficit targets is not an abstract study. It is not just because we want the deficit down. It is because we want to help the economy that can create the jobs and the opportunities.

Offside right now in terms of the targets, in spite of excellent growth, the interest rates have gone much higher than we thought. That is the problem and that is one of the reasons we have to meet our targets and get them down. It is one of the main reasons we will.

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11:55 a.m.

The Acting Speaker (Mrs. Maheu)

Because the Chair recognized a Liberal prior to a Reform member, we will be doing two blocks of Reform speakers beginning with the hon. member for Lethbridge.

SupplyGovernment Orders

11:55 a.m.

Lethbridge Alberta

Reform

Ray Speaker ReformLethbridge

Madam Speaker, I would like to give notice to the chair that Reform intends to divide its time from this period forward.

The resolution that we have before us that was placed on the Order Paper by the hon. member for Capilano-Howe Sound makes a very clear point not only to this House but to Canadians that we believe there should be no net tax increases at all used to eliminate the deficit that we face in this country. I think that should be the focus of the debate here today.

Canadians have told us very clearly, as a Reform caucus, that is the message that should be brought to this House. I have found in the last few days that the rate of mail that deals with the matter of taxes has increased significantly. For example, this morning I had 80 letters delivered to my office which sent a clear message that there should be no new taxes or no net tax increase of any kind in the upcoming budget expected at the end of February 1995. I think that is a message we should listen to and not ignore it at all when we are debating this issue.

It is important that this resolution is on the floor here today prior to the finalization of the 1995-96 budget because the minister and the Liberal government must hear a clear message. By debating this supply motion I think the clear message can be presented here on behalf of Canadians.

I want to put into the record a copy of a letter I received that was directed to the finance minister. I have the approval of the author of this letter to make it available in this House if necessary. The letter comes from a resident of my constituency from Magrath, Alberta, Mr. McClung. I thought he put this tax question clearly on the table as a middle income taxpayer of Canada.

He said this to our finance minister as of January 31, 1995: "Sir, I am mad as hell and I am not going to take it any more. Don't raise taxes, cut your spending. If you raise taxes on gasoline I will be forced by you to cut back on my driving. If you raise taxes on milk I will drink water. If you raise taxes on goods and services I will cut back on my purchases of taxed goods and services. If you raise taxes on my income I will be forced by you to again follow the above pattern.

"In my workforce lifetime of 36 years I have seen my take home pay dwindle and my purchasing power of that take home pay dwindle to the extent that I now need a second job in order to pay for my basic needs of shelter, food, clothing and transportation.

"Your suggestion of raising taxes is revolting. It will not fly this time. This is a revolt against higher taxes. Follow the lead from the states in the United States who have raised taxes and achieved the negative revenue increase and from those states who have lowered taxes and have achieved their goal of increased revenues".

His final advice to the minister is this: "Tighten your belt as I have tightened mine". Thousands and thousands of Canadians want that message placed on the floor of the House of Commons prior to the delivery of the 1995-96 budget.

Canadians do not only feel very strongly about taxes not being increased, but they also feel they are not getting value for their dollar. They also feel they are not getting the services nor the results from that dollar that is sent to Ottawa where it is redistributed in a variety of ways.

They asked this very basic question. "Where were our tax dollars being spent? I cannot see any difference, except that I have less left over at the end of the day". They have less in their pockets to spend on their own personal needs. If we look at some of the statistics available to us, that comment is only reinforced and confirmed in many ways.

Canadians today are paying more in taxes but a smaller percentage of these dollars are really being spent on services. In 1961 the average family's tax bill was 22 per cent of the family income. Today in 1994 the average family's tax bill is 46 per cent of that respective income.

I know we have all heard the projection as to how many months of the year we pay taxes to various forms of government. Not too long ago we paid taxes until the month of May. Now we are paying taxes until the month of June and then after the month of June we have some money left over for our own personal needs and support for our family responsibilities.

We also find that since 1980 alone the average family's tax bill has increased on average by $3,500. That includes a variety of taxes that are paid. That is a major increase, a major imposition on Canadians.

If we look at the other side of what is happening in terms of services, we will see the other part of this paradox that Canadians talk about, the fact that there are less services. I have heard that expounded here in this assembly.

People today find that crime is spreading. There is more crime, more dollars are being spent. This country's roads, bridges and infrastructure are somewhat deteriorating. The government is trying to shore that up with some kind of an infrastructure program that really did not directed to roads and bridges like it should have.

It got involved in a lot of other hobby projects and projects that seemed to be the pet objectives of local, provincial and federal politicians, but not on target in terms of what is really the basic infrastructure. Look at hospital beds for example across Canada. Waiting lists have been growing while we have been spending more and taxing more on the Canadian people.

The question is obvious. Why has this happened? It is because of our debt. We owe too much money and it is costing us too much to keep on going the way we have been. In fact, if we look at it in a small segment of time, every minute costs us $86,000 in terms of interest on the debt. Interest on the debt was about 10 per cent of government spending in 1974. Today it is over 25 per cent. In other words, 25 cents out of every dollar that government spends goes to pay the interest on the debt. That is not good enough.

The hon. member for Willowdale has made a very eloquent speech in this House. He said that the job is tough. It is a difficult job to face this deficit question and the government is going to stand up to it. He also said in those remarks-and I hear other Liberal members saying it at the same time-that we are going to introduce new taxes when the budget is brought down at the end of February.

The hon. member for Willowdale said: "We are just about at the ceiling". Those are the kind of weaselly words we use sometimes as politicians to say: "We are going to do something. We do not think we have pressed you hard enough. We do not think we have taken enough from you. We are just about there but we can take more".

In the Reform Party we believe we are at the ceiling. Canadians believe we are at the ceiling. We have paid enough taxes and there is no room between us and the ceiling of taxation.

The government has made a great case to Canadians about the fact that we have to create jobs. If we tax more, what is going to happen to the jobs?

The question was raised earlier about the hurt in terms of taxes and the economy. We know it will hurt individuals. We know it will hurt the budget of this country. Every 1 per cent increase in our interest rates, which is a direct result of increased taxes, will create a problem. I do not think that is acceptable.

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12:05 p.m.

Liberal

Harold Culbert Liberal Carleton—Charlotte, NB

Madam Speaker, I listened with great interest to the hon. member's presentation this morning.

One of the things I should tell him and other members of the Reform Party is that they are not the only party or the only body

to invent public forums to create the opportunity for people to provide direct input to their members. Like the Minister of Finance and many other members of this House, I have had many public forums.

Last fall we talked about the debt and the deficit. We talked about the ratio of offshore debt which we currently have and the concerns which that gave all of us here in this House as well as Canadians.

He referred to the goal this government had set of bringing our debt under control over the next three years, starting with the current year of bringing the deficit down to $39.7 billion, to go on to $32.7 billion and $25 billion in the third year, to reach our 3 per cent of gross domestic product. I want to assure the hon. member across the way that is only the first goal. The second goal will be to achieve a balanced budget as we go on to tackle and to break the back of the debt which this country has.

One of the things I have often heard from that side of the House is: Let us fill those loopholes that are in our taxation system; I am sure learned accountants across the country will find new ones if new taxation forms, but let us fill them. The minister has indicated on many occasions that he will make every attempt to fill those loopholes.

The system which we have to work with today, which has been inherited and has been added to over many years is cumbersome. We would like to streamline it. There is no question it needs to be done. I believe the minister will make every attempt to fill those loopholes to make our tax system more fair and equitable to all Canadians, regardless of whether they are in the upper echelon of social status, in the middle income group, or in the lower income group. That is what balance and equity are all about.

There will be those who will consider that attempt to fill in those tax loopholes as a tax increase, no question. Anyone it is going to affect will consider it a tax increase.

I would like to ask the hon. member across the way if that is not really indeed what he and his party stands for and would support and which the minister, I certainly hope, will bring forth in his budget.

SupplyGovernment Orders

12:10 p.m.

Lethbridge Alberta

Reform

Ray Speaker ReformLethbridge

Madam Speaker, the Reform Party believes there should be no net tax increase in terms of revenue to the Government of Canada. There is adequate revenue to support the programs that are here with a change in some priorities. That is number one.

If we plug a loophole somewhere which increases revenue, that should not mean we increase the overall revenue but we should then look at reducing tax somewhere else to the benefit of Canadians which may create some jobs in the marketplace. That would be a good transfer if it is possible. We are not against the plugging of loopholes for fairness, whatever that term means.

On the other side of the balance scale, expenditure reduction and deficit elimination is the road to which we can balance the budget and bring our fiscal house in proper order. We do not believe that 1 per cent of GDP expenditure reduction in three subsequent years will hurt or harm our economy in any way. That is a goal that could be achieved.

The government should look at that. The government is not. It is going to, as the member has stated, work toward the objective of 3 per cent of GDP, which will accumulate another $100 billion on top of our debt. This means that our interest payments may go from $40 billion to $50 billion which I think Canadians do not want to tolerate at this time.

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12:10 p.m.

Reform

Cliff Breitkreuz Reform Yellowhead, AB

Madam Speaker, today our country stands at a crossroads. Some say it is a watershed year for Canada. Two very crucial issues must be addressed as we go further into 1995, a year that could very well be the most decisive since Confederation.

The most important issue which must be addressed this year is the national deficit and debt crisis. It is growing by $110 million per day because of federal government mismanagement. The public is becoming all too aware of the effects of big government, big spending and big debt.

My colleagues alluded to the effects which are upward fluctuating interest rates, downward pressure on the dollar, higher taxes, lower consumer and investor confidence, and of course a lower standard of living.

It is interesting to examine what has happened to Canada's fiscal health since the 1960s. That decade rushed in the era of soak everyone, pay everyone's style of government, a government that would create a host of programs to look after the people, the creation of the just society.

Now we see the results of the so-called just society. We have the social welfare state, unsafe streets and the average family's tax bill which has soared by 1,200 per cent since 1961. That is three times the rate of inflation.

The time of government largesse must stop. The Canadian public is demanding balanced books from all levels of government. People are tired of paying for programs they never wanted, they never asked for and they certainly do not want to pay for.

That is why the Reform's supply motion is so important. We are asking that the federal government respond to the demands of Canadians for decisive spending cuts and no net tax increases to eliminate the deficit and to produce a smaller federal government.

My constituents are expressing their dismay over continued federal government mismanagement of their tax dollars. Like my colleague before me, I receive letters as well, lots of them.

Patrick W. Paul, a concerned taxpayer who lives in Edson in my Alberta riding of Yellowhead, expressed his sentiments in a letter to the finance minister. I have his permission to refer to it: Mr. Paul writes:

I would like to express my extreme concern over the fiscal quagmire our country of Canada has descended into. The taxpayers of our country have been forced to shoulder the burden of government fiscal mismanagement for too long. It is time for government to change. Increased taxes, year after year, rampant out of control government spending, rising interest rates and an ever downward spiralling dollar have caused tremendous pressure on the Canadian taxpayer.

Massive government bureaucracy, ridiculous social programs and paper tiger politicians are costing us too much. We cannot continue. We are the source of ridicule around the world, from the world press to even more seriously the world financial community. Our out of control debt, weak willed politicians and rudderless leadership are the sources of this ridicule.

Patrick Paul shares the opinion of most of my constituents who have taken the time to phone, to write or to stop me on the street. It is coffee shop talk. They want accountability. They want the federal government spending spree to stop.

Mr. Paul continues in his letter to the finance minister:

Now is the time to stop this lunacy. Use your mandate to dramatically reduce government spending and the size of government. This budget must reflect an immediate move by government to correct our problem. Do not increase taxes in any way, shape or form! Do not attack my pension plan through any alterations to the RRSP program-this is my pension plan, not yours. Do not approach this in a cavalier manner. There is no accountability in the federal political system, only pandering to special interest groups, lip service and finger pointing. Stand up, do the right thing and make the necessary cuts required. Accept the responsibility of your position, be accountable for your actions. Help your country. We are doing all we can.

Like so many Canadians, Mr. Paul has a warning for the finance minister and his government:

If this process does not begin with the new budget and there are no significant moves to correct this out of control situation, I promise that I will do everything in my power to contribute to the defeat of your party in the next election.

Despite the most serious warning from the taxpayers and voters of Canada this government continues to be unaccountable. We keep hearing through the media about possible tax increases in a few areas. People are demanding accountability. Unaccountability also takes form through the convoluted, cooked up answers we receive from the Liberal government regarding government spending.

Last week my colleague from Fraser Valley West asked a pertinent question regarding a suspect federal expenditure. He specifically questioned the merit of a grant for $33,800 for the study of major league baseball in Detroit and how this possibly benefits the taxpayers of this country?

The Secretary of State for Science, Research and Technology expounded a typical non-answer and told the House: "The Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council, an independent arm's length body, has done a great service to university researchers and has provided a very important foundation for knowledge in the country". Since when is the knowledge of the Detroit Tigers baseball team between 1945 and 1992 of any importance to the knowledge base in Canada?

The Secretary of State for Science, Research and Development does not have a monopoly on unaccountable answers in this place. The Minister for Western Economic Diversification is also good at dodging the issue of accountability of public funds. I asked him about spending in his department last week. He reply was filled with more rhetoric than substance.

I recently released a critical report of the Department of Western Economic Diversification. This 36 page document points out the inherent flaws of regional development programs, including using government money to subsidize private industry, distorting the competitive marketplace and pork barrelling.

The report I released, based on date received from the WED department, showed that the minister's home town of Winnipeg received a disproportionate amount of WED dollars between November 1, 1993 and November 15, 1994. The figures used in this report included a list of all the projects both announced and published by the department during that year. It shows Winnipeg received five times more than Vancouver, seven times more than Calgary and seventy times more than Regina.

In defence of this program the WED minister said there is another 80 per cent of projects which have not been announced yet.

I refer to an editorial which recently ran in the Vancouver Sun which sums up the absurdity of trying to defend this pork barrel program. The editorial is aptly entitled The Sage of Patronage'' and begins:And the prize for the worst political defence of 1995-yes, it's early but we just can't believe anyone will outdo this-goes to the staff of minister for Manitoba patronage, Lloyd Axworthy. Alberta Reform MP Breitkreuz pointed out that while Manitoba, population one million, had received $22 million between November 1, 1993 and November 15, 1994, British Columbia with a population of 3.3 million received $52 million. That is $22 a head for Manitobans, $15.75 for British Columbians''.

The editorial goes on to state: "Not fair, said Mr. Axworthy's communications assistant. A better comparison, she said, would include all projects which have been approved but not yet announced. Using her figures we see that while Winnipeg, population 652,000-plus, received $27.4 million, greater Vancouver with a population of 1.6 million received $19 million. That is $42 for every Winnipeger as against something less than $12 per head in greater Vancouver".

In trying to defend this program we see Winnipeg gets even more money than is stated in my report.

The taxpayers of Canada are tired of politicians trying to preserve the status quo because it is painfully obvious that the status quo no longer works. They want and demand their federal government to be fiscally responsible. The upcoming federal budget gives the government a chance to prove to Canadians that it is capable of acting in the best interest of the majority of taxpayers and cut spending, priorize spending to do the right thing for Canada.

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12:20 p.m.

Liberal

Alex Shepherd Liberal Durham, ON

Madam Speaker, I listened with interest to my fellow colleague.

All of us are opposed to tax increases. In my lifetime I do not remember anyone ever saying that they were in favour of tax increases. I can go back 20 or 30 years, I do not remember anybody saying that they liked the concept of tax increases.

I am surprised by some of the attitudes of the members of the Reform Party toward changes in expenditures. For instance, I heard the previous speaker talk in terms of any changes in revenue that came through a redefinition of taxation expenditures should somehow be turned around and given back. In other words, it should not be used to reduce the deficit.

At the same time, the same people are telling us that we are not moving fast enough on deficit reduction. I am getting mixed messages. I do not quite understand what they are trying to say.

RRSPs are a good example. The previous government raised RRSP exemption levels to $13,500, that is income levels for individuals earning $75,000. A proposal that I have had is to reduce that down to $9,000. With a $9,000 exemption that would be somebody with a $50,000 income. The object of the exercise would be that people earning over $50,000 surely can save for their own retirement without getting assistance from the taxpayers of Canada.

A second aspect of this also has to do with the foreign component of registered retirement savings plans. Currently we allow up to 20 per cent of RRSP funds to be held in foreign denominations. Once again the question is why is it that the Canadian taxpayer is allowing a tax deduction on their tax return simply so people can invest in foreign countries? It seems to me if people want to make the decision to invest in foreign countries they can do so without the credit of the taxpayers of the rest of Canada.

I am often concerned when I hear people talk about loopholes and incentives.

In my background as an accountant, today's incentives become tomorrow's loopholes. The loopholes we are talking about blocking today were probably yesterday's incentives.

The other aspect about no more taxes, of which I am a believer, is the deficit. The reality is that a deficit is unpaid taxes. In other words, we did not pay enough taxes and that is how we created this deficit; or, as some my colleagues would argue, we spent too much relative to our tax base. Be that as it may, as of today the deficit represents taxes we have not paid. The bottom line is how are we going to resolve those kinds of problems?

I have taken the time to work on a private member's bill which I hope to introduce this month that I call the taxpayers' bill of rights. The bill basically focuses on government spending and how government spending affects each and every individual. In other words, every time the government announces a program it should be visible and costed on a per taxpayer basis. It should allow the individual taxpayer choices and rights.

Do they think a bill in that vein would be good for accountability? Why do they feel expenditure reduction should not be used in fighting the deficit?

SupplyGovernment Orders

12:25 p.m.

Reform

Cliff Breitkreuz Reform Yellowhead, AB

Madam Speaker, it will have to be very brief. I believe the member used almost my entire five minutes with some more Liberal rhetoric.

We believe in a zero tax increase. We believe money is much better left in the hands of Canadian citizens than in the hands of politicians. The whole problem is not increased taxes, it is the money the government spends. It is definitely a spending problem, not a revenue problem.

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12:25 p.m.

Reform

Daphne Jennings Reform Mission—Coquitlam, BC

Madam Speaker, I would not have thought it necessary to have this debate today. After the October 1993 election I thought the message would have sunk into whichever party formed the government.

Canadians want decisive spending cuts, no net increases in taxes and a smaller, less interfering central government. What has happened? Since taking office the Liberal government immediately inflated the size of the deficit so when it was seemingly reduced it could pat itself on the back, saying job well done.

By doing this Liberals avoided tough decisions. Then we had the costly cancellation of the helicopter EH-101 purchase. Long term, high tech jobs were lost and millions paid in cancellation fees. The Pearson airport contract was cancelled. An airport desperately in need of refurbishing is allowed to decay while the

Liberal government fights it out with developers over the costs of cancellation. Again, jobs are lost and taxpayers' money is to be paid out with no gain whatsoever.

The infrastructure program begins. Billions of dollars borrowed for infrastructure programs by communities that needed jobs but not increased debt. We know that in a healthy economy it is the business sector that creates jobs, real jobs, and not the government through temporary government programs. As the unemployment figures released last week indicate, the jobs are not there anymore but the debt surely is and will be for years to come.

Then in the 1994 budget it is handed down, the great wait until next time budget. Canadians sat in anxious anticipation, hoping at last a Liberal government would make tough decisions. Who were they kidding? The joke was on the people of Canada. The government they elected, this Liberal government, let them down. Spending programs abound in last year's government's budget.

It is hard to imagine a government elected to make tough decisions using the old phrase that losing sports teams use, wait until next year. This is next year and there is still no sign of any willingness to take tough decisions. The government had a chance but really side stepped it.

Canada was going to go through the most massive restructuring of the social welfare system since it was put in place. Studies began. The minister of human resources made grand announcements. Policy and discussion booklets were produced. Two sets of committee hearings were held. This committee of the House of Commons travelled across the country in both sets of hearings.

Four million was given to 159 special interest groups. The people we should have heard from are regular, hard working Canadians who regularly pay their taxes and receive no special grants or privileges. However we heard from special interest groups to ensure that the committee heard testimony. And to what avail?

The minister of human resources announced that the government will have to deal with its budgetary problems before it will be able to get on with reforms. To paraphrase and perhaps combine a couple of old expressions, when the government's fiscal chickens came home to roost, they could not because the field was too full of social welfare sacred cows.

The Liberals side stepped yet another decision to revamp and reshape our social system. It is hard to believe a government so early in its mandate would admit to be fresh out of new ideas.

No one in Canada who has studied our social welfare system believes it needs more money thrown at it. If the government was not going to do anything, why did it spend all the money studying reform? How much did this exercise cost: $10 million, $20 million? Who knows, who cares? Obviously no one on the government side.

We in the Reform Party care deeply. We care about the country and we care about its people. As elected members to this House we realize we owe the people of Canada a duty, a duty not just to criticize but to present alternatives. We believe that the country's financial situation must be addressed in a positive way before the next election.

As a policy the Reform Party believes the solution to our deficit problem must be found on the expenditure side rather than on the revenue side. Presently the government has more than sufficient tax income.

Canadians expect to pay taxes. Canadians expect the government to spend our tax dollars wisely. When the government mismanages our tax dollars as governments have been doing since the 1960s, Canadians get angry. We cannot blame our fellow Canadians for not wanting their hard earned tax dollars to be wasted on grants, unnecessary byelections, make work programs and government to government international aid, among other things.

I recently heard a suggestion that the Liberals might bring in temporary tax increases. Let us not forget another temporary tax measure which was introduced many years ago. It is still with us today. It is called income tax. This tax takes the biggest bite out of our incomes. But it is not the GST, income tax or any other tax that is the problem. It is mismanagement. The problem is mismanagement of our tax dollars.

As Reformers are saying, Canadians fear that the Liberal budget will be the worst of all worlds: spending cuts that are insufficient to lead to a balanced budget and solve the problem, combined with tax increases that reduce disposable income and kill jobs.

As Reformers have said in the past, we believe the first change should come with reform of the MP pension plan. We are not talking about MPs' salaries, which from what I have seen since I have been in Ottawa indicates that MPs work very hard to earn their salaries. Cuts must also come in the institutions of government; the office of the Governor General, the Senate, the House of Commons, the Privy Council and the Prime Minister's office.

We must look at excessive travel of senior officials and urge the government to reduce the number of ministers of state and associate ministers. Cut down the size of government. The Reform plan in the end is to have a smaller, less intrusive and more efficient federal government.

We can include the electoral boundaries reform. Cut spending. We do not need 295 MPs in the House of Commons or 300 plus, as the government is suggesting. Each MP costs Canadian taxpayers about $1 million. The country to the south of us has 270 million people to our 27 million. They have approximately 437 in government to our 295. Last week in Washington I met

with American congressmen, congresswomen and constituents who told me their representation was very effective.

Reform is on record for looking at federal funding to multiculturalism and the official languages program. These are just some of the examples where Reform would cut.

We must protect law enforcement, health, education and our environment. We believe we must bring forward alternatives so Canadians can see there is another way other than the Liberal way. We see a need for a fresh, new vision of social policy in the next century, forwarded on the belief that the best guarantee governments can provide of individual personal security is to establish a framework of laws within which individuals can save for or insure against each of the contingencies that life may bring upon them.

We believe in five guiding principles to support our vision of the future. First, build on the Canadian tradition of self-reliance, recognizing the family as the primary caregiver in society.

Second, empower communities and charitable organizations to play an ever increasing rather than a diminishing role in social security.

Third, provide temporary assistance to people who experience short term misfortune while ensuring that long term assistance is reserved for those who are generally incapable of providing for themselves.

Fourth, where government must be involved in social service delivery, entrust the resources and the responsibility to that level of government which is closest to the people.

Fifth, ensure that we can pay for security measures without borrowing more money.

We believe that security must be provided against these types of problems. The first class of security need is for protection against personal catastrophes, such as a medical emergency or the death of a family's chief income earner.

The second class of security need consists of needs that will arise reasonably far into the future but which are predictable. Most people will have such needs at some point in the future. One cannot insure against them but one can prepare for them. Typical needs in this class are post-secondary education, non-catastrophic health care, retirement income and periodic unemployment.

The final class of security need is for intermediate help for those who have not been able to provide for themselves. This is the proper function of charity or, in the absence of it, government transfers.

This is not the cruel and heartless vision of social reform that is attributed to us by the media. It is a system designed to deliver a sufficient level of income to ensure that nobody lives in poverty. Public assistance is to be directed at those who for reasons of physical disability or advanced age are incapable of providing for themselves. At the other end of the scale no one with enough to pay taxes would receive assistance and those who receive assistance would pay no tax.

We must begin to rely on ourselves. We must rely on our families. We can no longer ask the government to provide personal security from the cradle to the grave.

These are some of the ways in which we can achieve a government which is smaller but more effective; spending cuts which eliminate programs that are no longer useful but retain our much needed health care system and our criminal justice system.

I hope the government is listening and will adopt these measures in its upcoming budget.

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12:35 p.m.

Reform

Mike Scott Reform Skeena, BC

Madam Speaker, it gives me great pleasure to rise in the House today to support my hon. colleague's motion urging the government to deal with our budget crisis through spending cuts rather than new tax increases.

I cannot stress enough how important it is to approach budgetary policy from the point of view that government in Canada is too big. There is a very simple reason why government spends too much. It tries to do too much. It tries to do things that it either cannot do at all or that it can do but does very badly.

I brought up this point in discussing Bill C-65. I said then, and I say now, that unless the Liberal government understands where the deficit problem is coming from, it will not be able to solve it. I said that our spending problem comes from our big social programs and that no solution which fails to target them can allow us to deal with our spending problems.

I also said then, as I say now, that we should listen to the Auditor General. We should make sure that when we devise a program we understand clearly what it is supposed to achieve. We should also make sure that we have a clear set of criteria to measure whether or not it has succeeded. We should shut it down if it is not succeeding and shows no signs of succeeding. That applies to the question of how to cut spending. It also applies to the question of whether to cut spending.

Our fundamental objective is to balance the budget. A secondary objective is to balance it at a sufficiently low level. If the government were to balance its books by spending and by taking in taxes three-quarters of the GDP I would not be happy. We should certainly consider whether any budget balancing measures lead to a zero deficit at an acceptably low level of overall spending and taxation. Our main objective is to balance the budget.

I know that the Liberals are still waving their little red book and claiming that 3 per cent of GDP is a good deficit target. It is not. It is painfully inadequate. Let us suppose that all we are setting out to do is to reduce the deficit to 3 per cent of GDP, to go over the cliff a little more slowly. How are we going to do it? What will our program be? How will we tell if it is working? What will we do if it is not?

There are three ways to try to control the deficit. The first one is to raise taxes. The second one is to cut spending. The third one is to fiddle the books. In my home province of British Columbia they are getting pretty good at number three. I am not even going to consider it. The only thing that I am going to say is that leaving things like the Canada pension plan off budget is not a good idea.

Let us assume that the federal government's books get neither better nor worse over the next few years. That leaves raising taxes or cutting spending. I do not think there is any big mystery about the appropriate yardstick for success or failure. Is the deficit getting bigger, staying about the same or is it getting smaller? By that standard, any reasonable person would conclude that what we have done over the past decade has failed.

If members want a grim laugh go back and read some of the speeches by one Brian Mulroney while campaigning for the Prime Minister's job. Or go back and read the budgets of Michael Wilson or Don Mazankowski. Heck, read the budgets by the former Liberal finance minister, the Prime Minister. They all preach about the dangers of deficits and debt.

It is absolutely amazing to see how many budgets are brought into this House and prefaced with the remarks that the deficit and the debt are the most primary concern of the government of the day. They all promise to bring budgets under control and I have no reason to think they were anything but sincere. Look at the method they chose: constant tax increases. Apply the yardstick. Did the deficit shrink appreciably? No, it did not.

George Orwell once said it is the first duty of every intelligent person to state the obvious. I am about to state the obvious. Tax increases have been tried as a deficit reduction measure for a long time and they have failed. This is also true internationally. It is time therefore for us to recognize the wisdom of an observation by Nobel prize winning economist Milton Friedman: "Governments will spend whatever they can take in plus whatever they can get away with".

The record is clear. Tax increases do not solve budget imbalances. Budget imbalances are caused by spending. They are caused by programs whose appetite is far greater than the tax system can deal with. No tax increases. Spending cuts.

The problem is on the spending side. That is where the ducks are. As Ralph Klein from Alberta said: "If you want to go duck hunting you have to hunt where the ducks are".

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12:40 p.m.

Scarborough East Ontario

Liberal

Doug Peters LiberalSecretary of State (International Financial Institutions)

Madam Speaker, I would like to note that I will be sharing my time with the member for Carleton-Charlotte.

I am pleased to participate in this supply day debate. It allows me to remind the House of a very important policy paper on the government's economic strategy by the Minister of Finance presented at the Standing Committee on Finance last fall.

I know that Reform has little time and less interest in any prescription requiring more than a single syllable. Its formula for government, for the economy and for the budget is simply slash and burn. It has the same petulant one-syllable approach to even boosting revenues by improving tax system fairness, that is, no, no, no.

I regret sounding so sarcastic but frankly that is the only reasonable response to a motion that sings a one-note song: cut the deficit. It proves that the Reform, a Johnny one-note party still cannot recognize the wider economic context that governments and budgets must address.

The great political philosopher Edmund Burke said: "The essence of tyranny is the denial of complexity". Deficit reduction in a way that lays the foundation for deficit elimination is essential. That is why the government has staked out concrete targets for dramatic deficit cuts. We have made clear that the ultimate goal is deficit elimination. Just reducing or eliminating the deficit by itself will not sustain or secure the type of country most Canadians want and expect. At a time of accelerating technology and evolving skills, when almost one in ten Canadian workers are still jobless, even a balanced budget alone will not deliver the new opportunities they need.

This is where our government differs so fundamentally from the Reform opposition. We understand because a majority of Canadians understand that Canada needs a disciplined strategy for economic security and growth.

Under the previous government Canadians saw too often and too much what happens when a government implements spending cuts without clear guiding principles. It is like building a house without a blueprint. It is costly in the long run and then the roof falls in.

That is why our government has set out the framework for economic policies we intend to build upon. The paper "A New Framework for Economic Policy" is a clear statement of objectives that will guide what the government will do and what it will not do. The logic and approaches of the 1960s simply are no

longer good enough for a 21st century global arena. We cannot afford them and we will not succeed with them.

Previous generations responded to the challenges of their eras by building the physical and social infrastructures of Canada. We too must create a new infrastructure for our time, the infrastructure of ideas and innovation. That is the thrust of our new framework paper. It proposes five key areas on which we must focus.

The first is helping Canadians acquire the skills to get jobs, to keep jobs and to find better jobs. The facts are clear. Jobs for people with high school education or less are shrinking while jobs for those with education beyond high school are growing. In fact projections show that almost half the new jobs now being created require more than 16 years of education and training combined.

I should add that there is a particular element of this challenge that engages small business. They do not have the resources of large firms to bring employees up to speed with the new skills that our information age increasingly demands. They depend on a public education system that can do its job.

In terms of education the challenge in Canada is not money. We spend more on education than just about anyone else. What we need are better results. Individuals, employers and the government must co-operate and share responsibility for improving education and training.

The second part of our framework is encouraging Canadians to adjust to change. Economic progress depends on a willingness to embrace new opportunities. It is our view that protecting and subsidizing business is almost always the wrong way to go.

For that reason the government is going to change the entire approach to subsidies. Equally we believe regional economic assistance should focus on genuine opportunities such as tourism that have great potential to be self-sustaining. Further, we believe high payroll taxes are nothing more than a tax on hiring. That is why we have taken steps to reduce UI premiums.

The third element of our framework is getting government right. Our attitude here is straightforward. It is time to make choices. We must eliminate or reduce lower priority activities and target scarce resources on the highest priority programs. That is one reason we are also trying to eliminate unnecessary federal regulations that cost Canadian business tens of billions of dollars every year.

Regulatory reform has the potential to increase productivity, stimulate new investment and create a more cost efficient government. We have already reviewed more than half of the 3,000 regulations on the books. We have eliminated one-quarter, left another quarter in place, and the rest are being revised or examined further.

Providing leadership in the economy is the fourth objective. While the private sector creates jobs the government has a clear role in fostering economic growth. In our knowledge based economy success depends on skill and innovation. The government can contribute to this dynamic process by gathering and disseminating information and ideas about technology and new markets. As well it can play an important role in bringing business together, something that is critical in an economy where new firms are small and specialized.

One priority is to do more to harness science and technology in order to improve productivity and growth. Government can help by building better links among industry, universities and government labs. It also has a particular role in making sure small business benefits from the latest know-how, particularly in the high technology sector.

Trade is another area where government involvement is essential for success. Today more than ever Canada is an exporting nation. It is vital that more companies become exporters and that we look beyond our traditional markets to the emerging economies of Asia, Latin America and eastern Europe. Here the government can help by providing more information and by ensuring that small businesses have access to export financing.

The fifth and final objective is absolutely essential to all others. We must create a healthy fiscal and monetary climate in Canada. If we do not meet this fiscal challenge, as the finance minister told the Standing Committee on Finance, we will fail at everything else.

That is why we have staked out a rigid commitment to bringing the deficit down to 3 per cent of the economy in three years, effectively cutting it in half. That is why we have also made it clear that this deficit target is a first step in meeting our ultimate goal of eliminating the deficit completely.

It would be absurd to claim that a single paper is the answer to curing Canada's future, but it is equally absurd to promote deficit elimination as a cure-all of every Canadian challenge. To me and I hope to all Canadians the evidence is clear. Our government has a vision of the role for government in building a more prosperous nation.

The opposition would better serve its mandate by providing meaningful policy alternatives rather than simplistic motions without scope, without depth and especially without heart.

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12:50 p.m.

Reform

Jim Abbott Reform Kootenay East, BC

Madam Speaker, it is interesting the secretary of state, being as it were second in command just under the finance minister, delivered the speech that he did this morning. I do not think he or perhaps the government or perhaps the Liberal side understands that Canadians are concerned about a further tax grab, about further tax increases.

While I respect the fact that the secretary of state gave us a nicely balanced speech about economic objectives, fostering economic growth and all these other things that are essential, nonetheless I would point out to him that what is concerning Canadians at this time, and I would suggest what is concerning foreign investment or people who are buying marketable securities offshore or outside the country, is that his government just does not seem to understand. It is an overexpenditure problem; it is not a taxation problem.

I am fully aware that my comment and my follow-up question are not going to be directly on what he just spoke about, but I suggest with the greatest respect that his speech did not have anything to do with the topic that has been brought forward by the opposition, the Reform Party in this instance.

I am sure that coming from the banking background and as an economist he would be aware of the fact that while corporate profits have dropped 10 per cent in the last 10 years corporate taxes at all levels, including compliance costs, have increased by 69 per cent. I therefore find it somewhat strange that he and his government would be talking about a further confiscation of the wealth or the ability of corporations to be able to fund themselves.

I was listening to the chair of the finance committee talking about the fact that there are corporations that because of fast write-offs or other procedures involved in the current tax system should be taxed. That is why the government is talking about a wealth or a capital tax on larger corporations. This is exactly what the Liberals are talking about.

Would the secretary of state be able to inform us whether he, the finance minister and their colleagues are perhaps talking about a cash flow tax? In other words we understand that we have a wealth tax.

Because a corporation is able to carry forward losses and other legitimate things in the tax system it has a sufficient amount of flow. The government will say: "My goodness, here is a couple of million dollars flowing along. Why don't we put our ladle, our pail or our big scoop into this tax?"

Does the Liberal government not understand that individuals and corporations are saying no tax increase?

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12:55 p.m.

Liberal

Doug Peters Liberal Scarborough East, ON

Madam Speaker, I am delighted to reply to the hon. member's question. Again we find the Reform Party is suggesting new taxes. The only matter of taxation the finance minister has mentioned is that we will continue to make the Canadian tax system fairer.

The Reform Party keeps suggesting new taxes. Let me tell Reform Party members that Canadians are not just concerned with taxes. They are concerned with taxes; they are not just concerned with taxes. They are also concerned with jobs. They are concerned with education. They are concerned with crime in the streets. I read my mail every day. They are concerned about all these things.

The Reform Party is playing a Johnny one-note tune on deficits and on taxes and is missing what Canadians really want.

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12:55 p.m.

Liberal

Harold Culbert Liberal Carleton—Charlotte, NB

Madam Speaker, I am pleased to join in the debate.

During one of the question and comment periods this morning I mentioned that like many members on all sides of the House I have had an opportunity to host public forums on issues such as the debt and the deficit. We got input from people across our constituencies on what their approach would be. That is part of our responsibility. That is a part of our ongoing job.

Many people said to me that there had to be cuts on the expenditure side, that the government had to do better, that we had to eliminate waste wherever we find it or wherever possible, and that we had to avoid duplication in efforts whether with departments internationally or our provincial counterparts in their respective departments.

The finance committee looked at those matters during its review. The minister and his department have taken them into consideration during the process of preparing for the budget. I say to my colleagues across the way that many Canadians have told us at these meetings that they want government to get it right. That is exactly what we are attempting to do.

People lost faith in our predecessors. Goal after goal was set. Was one ever met? I do not recall one that stands out in my mind as being met.

The government set goals like one might in business. Any good business person knows that challenges and goals must be set for both the business and the staff. Goals are set that offer challenge; the goals are achievable albeit difficult. That is exactly what we have done as a government. We have set some difficult goals.

I have to admit in many cases I have scratched my head and asked how we are going to meet this, that it is going to be very difficult. During the process both the finance minister and quite obviously the Prime Minister have asked all departments, all portfolios and all ministers to share in this challenge before us. I am sure in many cases specific sums were expected to be cut from the respective departments.

As everyone in this House knows, program review has been taking place. That program review asked every department and every portfolio to look at every line of every expenditure to ensure that they were going to be able to justify it to you and me. Ultimately that is where our responsibility lies. It lies not in the

day to day operation but in the policy, the planning and the review of the results. That is exactly what the Minister of Finance will do when he brings down his budget.

As we mentioned earlier, this government did set a goal. We took over in the 1993 fiscal year a deficit of some $42 billion which had once again gone even further than the previous administration had projected. We set a goal to bring that deficit down this current fiscal year to $39.7 billion, next year to $32.7 billion, and the third year to $25 billion, thus meeting our commitment of 3 per cent of gross domestic product.

Members would know that in the last couple of weeks the Minister of Finance has stated publicly that not only will we meet that goal this current fiscal year but we will exceed it. That is great news for us. It is fantastic. That is what we should be working toward and challenging ourselves toward. I know the Minister of Finance is doing that and is impressing on the staff of the department to ensure we do all possible to not only meet the current year and subsequent year goals but to surpass them if we possibly can.

During this whole process of reaching our goals we have another goal. That goal is for growth and job creation in this country. Of all the G-7 nations in the world, the economic leaders of the world, in the 1994 calendar year this country was number one. We were number one in the world in economic increase and development.

That in itself is part of our challenge, the balancing part, to be very gentle. The actions we take must be balanced to achieve our goals in reducing our deficit, taking hold of our debt, bringing home those offshore portions wherever possible but at the same time doing it in a balanced fashion that will keep another commitment of this government for economic development: jobs and growth. We call it our growth and jobs agenda.

Members will notice that every piece of material which has been brought forward by this government has had that as the number one priority: jobs and growth. Growth economically for our businesses. Jobs for our young people completing community college and post-secondary education in universities. It is so they will have the opportunity we and our parents had to have a job, to have that self-discipline, to have respect for themselves, to know that following their education there is an opportunity in this country to go to work and to provide for themselves and their subsequent families.

As a member of this government I am indeed proud of the approach it and our finance minister have taken fiscally. There is no question we want to see the major part of deficit reduction done on the expense side. There is no question and the minister has stated that time and time again.

As I mentioned before, a number of those loophole areas are going to have to be filled. I pressured the minister, others did as well. That will be seen by some people as tax increases. I see it as being a fair and equitable tax system for all Canadians.

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1:05 p.m.

Reform

Jim Abbott Reform Kootenay East, BC

Mr. Speaker, I was listening with great interest to the member's speech. He was talking about the goals the government has set. I would like to talk about those goals.

I wonder if the hon. member would agree with me that if we aim low we just might be able to succeed sometimes, if to aim low so we can succeed is not necessarily where the government is coming from. I wonder why the Liberals do not realize that you cannot get over a wide chasm in two jumps.

The situation is that with our constant overspending and our constant deficit building we are taking the future from our great-grandchildren who we do not know and we have not seen yet. This is an intergenerational transfer of taxation. With the spending we as Canadians under this Liberal government are presently doing, we are handcuffing our descendants countless years into the future with taxation. It is for money we are spending today.

Specifically the government talks frequently about this 3 per cent thing. The people of Canada should know that since the government took over, the federal debt, not the deficit which is the overspending but the federal debt, has increased $60 billion. That is just since this government has taken over.

The government's target is to get to 25 per cent of gross domestic product within four years. People like ourselves figure four years times $25 billion is $100 billion. It will be significantly more than $100 billion. Even if we stayed with $100 billion additional debt, the interest charge on that additional $100 billion that we are having our great, great, great-grandchildren responsible for with their taxation, is $9 billion a year.

The federal transfers for post-secondary education are $2.6 billion. The federal transfers for health are $6.5 billion. In other words for just health and post-secondary education, it is $9.1 billion. And this government with $100 billion more debt is going to be encumbering our great, great-grandchildren with $9 billion more.

It is going to be a lot more than $100 billion, but let us take that number. If the government in all of its wisdom is prepared to go $100 billion more into debt, the interest charges will be at least $9 billion. That then wipes out our ability to fund post-secondary education or to make federal transfers to the provinces in support of health care. Where in the world does the hon. member expect to get that from, except the bogey man which Canadians are concerned about because it is more of a tax grab, more of this government in Canadians' wallets?

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1:10 p.m.

Liberal

Harold Culbert Liberal Carleton—Charlotte, NB

Mr. Speaker, relative to the points and concerns made by my hon. colleague across the way, I should say first of all that I am not sure how the Reform Party set its goals low as he has suggested. However the Liberal way is to set goals that are a challenge, yet goals that are achievable even though they may be somewhat difficult to achieve. We as a Liberal government have set those goals and we will achieve them, as everyone well knows.

I agree with my hon. colleague across the way that no question, when talking about compound interest, it is a wonderful thing when you are receiving it or if you have dollars to invest and can receive it. It multiplies day in and day out and is a wonderful thing. He is absolutely right. It is a terrible thing when it is the other way around and you are paying your debts. Whether it be us in our private lives, or business, or certainly as government, there is no question it is a terrible thing.

Those goals have to be set and we have to meet those goals and those challenges each step of the way as we go along. In this case we will meet our first goal of reaching 3 per cent of the gross domestic product. Our next goal will be on a balanced budget. Following that, we will break the back of this country's debt. We will take hold of these finances for years and years to come.

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1:10 p.m.

Reform

Mike Scott Reform Skeena, BC

Mr. Speaker, I would like to respond to the remarks made by my colleague across the way.

We hear from these Liberal members today about how essential it is for government to be involved in the economy and how if we can do things just a little better, if government can just get it right, things will get better in Canada.

We hear about complexity and we hear about the wider economic reality as if these were some buzz phrases that meant that government has to stay involved in the economy. I would suggest that we have had 25 or 30 years of government involved in the economy, trying to direct the economy, trying to drive us to where it would like us to be and it has failed miserably.

There is a model right now for government to emulate and that is Mr. Klein's government in Alberta. Mr. Klein has done some very courageous things starting with the elimination of the MLA's pension plan and a reduction of the MLA's remuneration. He has demonstrated leadership at the top.

Then he has gone on from there to make across the board cuts, major cuts in his government's spending. The reality of that is that Alberta is creating jobs. It is instilling investor confidence and it is showing the people in Alberta that it is serious about reducing its debt and its deficit.

Would the member across the way not agree that is the model for this government to be following rather than to be following the tired old ideas that have not worked and will continue not to work if this government continues on its present course of action?

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1:10 p.m.

Liberal

Harold Culbert Liberal Carleton—Charlotte, NB

Mr. Speaker, first I should say that government's involvement is certainly to set an economic confidence in this country in which the business and industry communities can build economically to create those jobs. That is where the jobs come from. The member is right. They do not come directly from government. They come from government indirectly because government has to set that confidence, that pace and that tone economically in the country for that to happen. That is exactly what this government is doing.

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1:10 p.m.

Bloc

Pierre Brien Bloc Témiscamingue, QC

Madam Speaker, today we are discussing a motion by the Reform Party whose purpose is, basically, to make the government reduce its spending so as to improve the state of public finances. There is nothing wrong with the principle as such. The motion also wants the government to avoid raising taxes and to downsize government. The Bloc Quebecois certainly has no trouble accepting these three principles.

However, the position behind this motion is not necessarily one we can embrace. Our position on the economy is certainly not that of the Reform Party, certainly not the position of the right, which says that economic growth depends largely on what the wealthiest in our society contribute to the economy.

This is often the group they try to defend, either by proposing a single tax or other measures to avoid any form of progressive taxation or redistribution. There are certainly major differences in how the role of government is viewed with respect to redistribution of income. In any case, since it came to power, this government has done very little to improve public finances.

A few weeks from now, we will be told that by the end of the fiscal year, we will have a deficit of about 38 or 39 billion dollars, in addition to a debt of over $500 billion, accumulated during the past twenty years. This is hardly a reason to celebrate.

However, I know some members will celebrate, because the deficit will be one or two billion dollars less than the original forecast. However, whether the deficit is on target is irrelevant. We have to consider the facts.

The facts are that we will still have a very substantial deficit of 37 or 38 billion dollars, as I said earlier, and perhaps even 39 billion, if the government tries to include some of next year's

spending in this year's budget to reduce the pressure on the next fiscal year. We must get back to basics. Forget about objectives. What we want is results.

Since the government failed to make certain cuts last year, this has put a lot of pressure on Canadian interest rates. Since February, interest rates have gone up by about 300 base points. Everyone who has to borrow money is feeling the impact on the economy. The Minister of Finance likes to say that increases in the interest rate are like increases in income tax. If he believes what he says, why did he not do something earlier in the year, instead of adding this pressure to the interest rates?

Of course, our friends like to say that the state of the economy is a destabilizing factor. I, however, contend that the greatest destabilizing factor is the state of public finances. Foreign investors recognize this, and this is what they look at first.

There is also no vision for society. It is unfortunate to find that, after a year and a half in office, the present government is taking the same approach as its predecessor. According to this approach, cuts are the only way to improve public finances-a view shared by the Reform Party.

I can remember during the elections speeches about giving priority to jobs and trying to generate growth as ways to improve public finances. So much for those speeches. No vision of society has been put forward in an effort to find a way to revitalize the economy, to everyone's benefit.

You are aware that economic indicators measure growth with traditional indicators such as production levels. We must not forget, however, what we learned in the 1980s-that increased does not necessarily mean increased employment.

The two are linked, of course. If there is an increase in total production, or in the gross domestic product, the number of jobs will certainly increase also, but these two trends are separate. Production may increase significantly faster than the level of employment.

The gross domestic product is therefore not the only yardstick for the economy. We have to focus on the people who are increasingly excluded from society, the unemployed living on unemployment insurance or welfare or who have returned to school because they cannot find a job. Many people are waiting to enter the labour market. The present government has no vision, in this regard.

I would like to speak a bit about the approach which consists of saying that the deficit problem will be resolved by making cuts across the board. We agree that certain cuts can readily be made, for example in the government machine. Later on, I will return to the Bloc Quebecois' suggestions which we have repeated time and again.

We have a major difference of opinion with the Reform Party: in our opinion, some expenditures are tax expenditures. We must look beyond budget expenditures, transfers to individuals and to the provinces.

We should also look at whether they are tax expenditures, lost revenues. We could get into a real philosophical debate on this issue: Is it a tax hike? Is it a spending cut? It seems clear to us that it is a question of spending.

It has always been difficult to discuss the issue of tax expenditures in an effective way, even during the finance committee's hearings, because the figures are derived from data that is only partly revealed. Expenditures that the government plans to make are revealed, but no roll-up of these expenditures is ever given, even though that information is available.

Therefore, I want to talk about this right leaning philosophy that only wants to see across-the-board cuts, blind indiscriminate cuts, a philosophy that often ferments such ideas as a single tax rate, the same rate for everyone. It tempts even the people who would be affected the most. They say "use one tax rate". Currently, we use a progressive tax rate system; the higher the income, the higher the tax rate. Of course, the tax system, however, sometimes reverses trends, but that is another problem which can be looked at in a different way.

Therefore, the principle of redistribution, which is desirable in society, would be severely compromised under a system with one tax rate. I said to someone who was explaining the concept to me that I would give the matter more thought if that person could explain to me how income would be redistributed with just one tax rate for everyone. As long as the proposal cannot be linked with redistribution, how the state redistributes wealth, the concept will not get any support from me.

I would now like to return to what can be expected in the next budget and rumours on this subject. It is becoming clearer that the government will increase its revenues in the next budget. An increase in the surtax for individuals or in income tax rates, traditional taxes or certain consumption taxes is planned, or pension funds may even be hit. There is obviously a lot of money there, and the government is looking for revenue. It is much easier to get a quick revenue fix than to cut spending; it takes more courage to cut spending, especially when friends are among those affected. The Liberals have always had trouble cutting their friends's spending so this may be very difficult to do.

Now why does the government want to do that? Because of the two additional years, and the Conservatives and Liberals are equally at fault. For the past two years, there have been no major changes in budget policy, and we have just had two consecutive

deficits of $40 billion, record amounts in Canadian history. This is a country that is supposed to have the best quality of life in the world. This is the country they are trying to sell us, especially to Quebecers. Perhaps we should check the size of the mortgage.

My point is that this government has only itself to blame, because it failed to take action during the second year.

I will give an example of tax expenditures that were introduced and then withdrawn, to show the lack of vision and judgment we see so often in our tax system. That is why we favour a genuine review of the tax system, not a quick fix to please friends who contribute to the party coffers but something that will reflect our social values, our principles and our objectives. Look at the way the government treats capital gains, for instance.

What was the procedure in recent years? First, the government introduced the principle of allowing a $500,000 exemption; the first $500,000 of capital gains were not taxable. After a while, the exemption was reduced to $100,000. Once taxpayers in the highest bracket had taken advantage of this exemption-not everyone can declare a capital gain of $500,000-the government said: "Well, this is costing the government a pretty penny. We will reduce the exemption to $100,000", and so they did. Now that the others had managed to take advantage of this exemption, they said: "Well, this might be too costly for the government after all, so let us cut the exemption to zero", which they did.

If it does not make sense to treat capital gains differently today, why did they do it in the past? How much money did the government lose in the process? How much did it have to borrow to compensate? How much did it cost society? Now, they claim social programs are too expensive, that they are putting us into debt, and the government has all kinds of names for those people.

Actually, if we look at the operating budget, although it does show a deficit, it is practically negligible, which means that if we had not accumulated all this debt over the years, we would not be having this discussion today.

What caused these problems? Is it our social programs? I am not so sure.

This certainly requires some adjustment and a serious look. I come back to the approach advocating only cuts and not fiscal spending. What does this mean? Forty billion dollars spread among 20 million taxpayers. That means about $2,000 per person. We resolve the deficit problem by cutting $2,000 per individual, cuts in expenditures related to individuals.

Can everyone handle $2,000 in cuts? We here in this House can do it easily, with no problem. However, what about people on social assistance, single parent families and older people? Can they handle a $2,000 cut per person? Can they really? It is not a sure thing.

This is why we need to have another way of looking at the approach to public finances as well. There has to be a way to put a stop to the present inefficiencies and straighten out the job market with different and new ideas. We could use our imaginations, we could be creative. There is no end to technological innovation these days. When it comes to public finances, we are stuck for ideas. We want to copy other formulae and other approaches.

We hear more and more talk about New Zealand in Canada these days. People are trying to convince us that we will share the same fate. Why do we not try a different formula? Why not do things differently?

Over the next year, debate will be vigorous, because two visions of society are on a collision course, particularly in Quebec with the discussions on the referendum. I hope there are Canadians who also share a different vision from what we are hearing conveyed at present.

I would like to speak about reviewing the taxation system in connection with current statistics on income. Sixty per cent of people, 60 per cent of the population, have incomes of $25,000 or less. Returning to my earlier idea of cutting expenditures by $2,000, for people with a $25,000 income, that is going to hurt. We must target the cuts where the money is and where it will hurt much less.

Of course, I mentioned redistribution. Also, when we put forward budget policies, specific taxation policies, we must evaluate them before developing them, while they are being developed and after they have been developed. Given the veritable army of civil servants, this could be done and it would be a more productive use of their time. Perhaps cutting 45,000 employees would not be contemplated if this type of useful analysis were conducted. It is certainly possible to re-think the work of the public service in regards to such an approach.

I took part in prebudget consultations. I must say that I was rather disappointed. Earlier, I heard a Liberal member say that all departmental programs were undergoing a review. It is a shame that, in politics, we lack the courage to lay working hypotheses out on the table when people are being consulted. These public consultations were very difficult because the discussion became almost philosophical at one point. It was hard to say that there was nothing concrete, only partial information. It was difficult for people to judge, even for members of the committee.

If that review had been conducted a little quicker, put out on the table to be debated, but it was not, and the government does not want to be transparent, it wants to give itself as much leeway

as possible. It does not want to resolve the public finances issue effectively, publicly. Never. This will be done in the backrooms.

Therefore, in my opinion, the exercise will be relatively ineffective. Anyway, most of the report was written by the Department of Finance, which does not want to be affected by the recommendations, so it is making sure it has some leeway.

I would like to use the remaining three or four minutes to talk about the rumour going around regarding a form of flexible federalism which will be introduced in the next budget by decentralizing some powers. What a laugh. The Axworthy reforms were strongly contested and implementing his reforms is proving very difficult; the proposal is obviously lacking vision; people are not rallying around it, they are divided on the issue.

The government had to put these reforms on the back burner because of the referendum campaign. But the underlying idea was to cut social program spending. How can this be done now, and in a more positive way? That must be the challenge that Cabinet is facing now, and a decision on the issue has probably already been reached, since the budget has to go to the printer any day now.

Therefore, it is probably already a done deal and the Minister of Finance is probably now in the process of announcing to his provincial counterparts how he intends to reduce the amount of money they receive, and trying to have them believe that he is telling them good news.

What the government is essentially trying to do is to regroup certain transfer payments. Education, health and Canada Assistance Plan transfer payments will be grouped together and added up. What the government will be doing is an addition of sorts. The government will add up the amounts and say to Quebec or another province: "This was what you received in the past, and now we will give it to you in one block payment. However, you will get a lot less, because we have to improve public finances. The rest is up to you. You must decide where to cut, make unpopular choices, tell students their tuition fees will go up. You will bear the responsibility». That is essentially the message they want to convey, while trying to pass it off as decentralized federalism.

Will they cut the workforce which administers these programs here? I doubt it. Will they abolish national standards if they stop contributing financially? If they no longer make a financial contribution, will they forget about national standards? On what logical basis would we maintain national standards, although we know full well that the Liberal Party has this vision of national standards, centralized here and equal across the country, a single country, a single nation in their opinion?

It would be very surprising for them to really decentralize, but they try to convince people that this is flexible federalism. I said yesterday, and I still think today, that this type of federalism is so flexible that we are broke.

In conclusion, I will say a word about transfer payments to the provinces. If I remember correctly, transfer payments to the provinces have been cut by $48 billion since 1982, including $12 billion for Quebec alone, but that did not improve the government's financial situation. So we must not fall into the trap of thinking that this will do much to improve government finances. First of all, it is shifting the burden to the provinces. This will be hard on several provinces whose credit ratings are substantially lower than that of the federal government. The federal government's financial situation is worse, except that it is easy for them to generate revenue by collecting more taxes, but in theory only because people would not stand for it in practice.

This did not put government finances on a healthier footing and it is not a good approach. We must also look at job creation, an issue on which the government is very silent. It lacks a vision. In summary, yes to selective cutbacks, first in the administrative machinery, at the Department of National Defence. We must also collect unpaid taxes. We can achieve a real reduction in overlap, which provides much more effective ways to create a better climate and improve the economic situation. However, I doubt very much that this is the approach contemplated by the government and that concerns me a great deal. In any case, people will have to make choices soon and we will see which vision of society they prefer, especially in Quebec.

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1:30 p.m.

Liberal

Nick Discepola Liberal Vaudreuil, QC

Madam Speaker, it was with considerable interest that I listened to and participated in the debate this morning. I listened closely to the speeches by the member for Saint-Hyacinthe-Bagot and my colleague from Témiscamingue, for whom I have a great deal of respect. I do not always agree with them and I would even say that I am almost in complete disagreement with their option, but I do agree with one point that both members raised this morning, in this House.

The member for Témiscamingue has just concluded with the remark that flexible federalism, or a flexible status quo, if I may so describe it, is the cause of the problem we are now facing daily in Canada. In this regard, I am in complete agreement with him. It is because of the debt load that has plagued the country for years now.

I also agree with another of their observations, which is that the debt load and particularly the deficit we have had for a number of years are not the result of social programs.

There are two factors, first of all the debt load, which is very high, and the political uncertainty, which has resulted in an incredible jump in interest rates.

As the member has already pointed out, since the report was tabled in December there has been an increase of 300 base points, or 3 per cent. I would remind this House that an increase of 1 per cent represents an additional burden of 1.7 billion dollars. This is why, with the budget soon to be tabled, we are 12 to 14 billion dollars short of our objective to reduce the deficit to 3 per cent of the gross domestic product.

I would like to put a question to my honourable colleague, who said that our problem is one of the main reasons why their future is brighter in an independent Quebec. I cannot believe that an independent Quebec will be in a better position to offer the services that taxpayers now receive.

Take the debt, for example. It is a very good example. The member for Saint-Hyacinthe told us himself this morning that he was prepared to absorb 25 per cent of the debt. Some economists say that this additional burden would drive the debt of an independent Quebec up to 215 billion dollars. That would be 123 per cent of its gross domestic product. There is no way that an independent Quebec can offer the same services that taxpayers are receiving today.

Could the member explain, for the benefit of all those who will soon have to make a decision, how he expects to offer the same services in an independent Quebec without extensive cuts, when the debt burden is so heavy and there is the risk of a premium on interest rates that would add to the load?

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1:35 p.m.

Bloc

Pierre Brien Bloc Témiscamingue, QC

Madam Speaker, I will be pleased to answer my colleague who, I hope, will be living in that Quebec with us too. By then, I also hope we will be able to convince him because he seems to show a certain interest in that new Quebec.

First of all, I would like to make a few corrections in what he said about the causes of economic uncertainty. As a primary factor, and I hope this is an error, he cited the political situation as a cause of instability over the last year. May I remind him that the greatest instability in interest rates, when they increased the most, in April and May, that was in reaction to the federal budget when the stock markets recognized that public finance had no means to correct the situation. If he has stock market investments, he will be able to check as stock market performance and interest rates are very often at variance.

The federal budget and overall indebtedness are the first factor. Even if some people mention the uncertainty associated with a sovereign Quebec, this is not because of the political regime or because they have concerns about public finances in a sovereign Quebec in view of the present high Canadian deficit.

They themselves implicitly admit that it is the size of the Canadian deficit which causes uncertainty. This has nothing to do with politics. A sovereign Quebec with viable public finances would be of no concern whatsoever to financial markets.

He also stated that a sovereign Quebec would be responsible for 25 per cent of the debt and that my colleague had mentioned that this morning. He probably remembered part of what my colleague said. The latter probably said that this is what the Liberal and federalists would want. If I may give an example, the Bélanger-Campeau commission which examined this subject indicated that we de not share only one side of the balance sheet, we share the assets and the debt, both sides.

When we add this all up and look at it from an assets standpoint, we arrive at a figure of 18.5 per cent. Since we are contributing 23 per cent of federal government revenues, and taking on 18.5 per cent of the debt, this means a significant gain on top of savings in overlap. There will no longer be two departments of revenue, two departments of the environment, two departments of whatever. I could go on a long time. This will eliminate problems for business, which has to meet the different environmental standards of Ottawa and Quebec City, complete tonnes of forms, GST reports, QST reports. Our business people will use this time to concentrate on what they do best: improve the economy. This will be good for Quebec and good for Canada. I hope Canada's economy will be as strong as it can be, because Canada will be our principal trading partner.

I have no concerns about the viability of a sovereign Quebec. I am perhaps a bit more concerned, sincerely, about the viability of a Canada without Quebec, since it will have to redefine itself, and the process has not yet begun. It will be hard to adjust quickly.

Things are happening in Quebec. A lot of people are taking part in the regional commissions. They are expressing their ideas. They are describing their vision of Quebec in the future. And as I said, it is completely different from what I hear people talking about here. There, they are talking about equity, redistribution and social justice. Here, people are talking about reforms to social programs that involve cuts affecting the disadvantaged in order to improve public finances.

There are other ways to improve public finances, and I think the approach of a sovereign Quebec will show the way, and we can become an international example on how to turn public finances around and achieve sovereignty democratically. Quebec knowledge and know-how will become an international export.

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1:40 p.m.

Reform

Leon Benoit Reform Vegreville, AB

Madam Speaker, I cannot believe what I am hearing here today from this member

of the Bloc. I think it is time he became accountable to this House, to the people in his constituency and to the people across the country because he is not being accountable.

This member has said that spending on social programs has not played a part and has not been the reason that we have a deficit in this country. I would like him to answer some very direct questions.

Total federal spending was about $163 billion last year. About $40 billion of that was interest payments on the debt. You are not going to make interest payments on the debt? About $80 billion was in the area of social program spending. About $43 billion was for all other government spending, including the cost of government, defence, Indian affairs and so.

Reform put out a detailed plan to cut $10 billion from that $43 billion and presented it to the finance minister and to the finance committee. I never heard members of the Bloc saying that they would cut more from that area. They complained they would not make the cuts that Reform has proposed to make out of that area. That means the Bloc is prepared to cut more out of this $80 billion in social program spending because there is no other place to make the cuts. That is reality.

I would like this member to start talking about reality. I want to ask him directly how he would propose to balance the budget using some fact without making cuts in the area of social program spending. I would like him to answer this in a way that will be believable to the people in his constituency and across the country.

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1:40 p.m.

The Acting Speaker (Mrs. Maheu)

You have barely 30 seconds left.

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1:40 p.m.

Bloc

Pierre Brien Bloc Témiscamingue, QC

I will be quick, Madam Speaker, and will ask my colleague to reread my speech, which he probably did not understand, because it was in French. Let him reread its translation.

I can see why someone who can only envision resolving the public finances issue through social spending cuts would be frustrated to see other people find other ways of resolving it. They know very well how hard a time they are having with it. Their ideas are not being accepted in Quebec and that probably frustrates them all the more.

It would be my pleasure to send him a copy of the finance committee's report, which contains the Bloc Quebecois' proposed solution to the public finances problem. I will tell him once again that it was certainly not the most needy who got us into our current debt situation. That is certainly not the case. Look at the past to see the reasons for the current debt level.