Madam Speaker, it is as the official opposition critic on training and youth that I rise today to speak about the impact of the last federal budget on young people.
Like most of my official opposition colleagues, my initial reaction to this budget is that the federal government wants to transfer the blame for its cuts to the provinces.
On February 27, the Minister of Finance announced that, starting in 1996-97, he would reduce by $2.5 billion transfer payments to the provinces for health care, social assistance and post-secondary education.
By combining these three payments into a single consolidated block transfer called the Canada Social Transfer starting in 1996-97, the minister claims that "provinces will now be able to design more innovative social programs-programs that respond to the needs of people today rather than to inflexible rules. However, flexibility does not mean a free-for-all. There are national goals and principles we-meaning the Minister of Finance, of course-believe must still apply, and which the vast majority of Canadians support".
Such is the finance minister's flexibility. It involves national standards that Quebec does not want and never wanted in the first place. In this context, I think it would be a good idea to remind you of Bill C-28 respecting financial assistance to students, which was passed on June 23. This bill provides among other things that, from now on, the Canadian Minister of Human Resources Development, instead of the provincial governments as was the case before, will designate the appropriate authority in each province responsible for choosing educational institutions eligible for federal financial assistance.
Second, the provincial education ministers wanting the right to opt out with full financial compensation must convince the Minister of Human Resources Development that their provincial programs produce the same results as the federal programs in each of the areas targeted by the federal legislation.
Great freedom, is it not? You can develop programs, as long as they are absolutely identical to those decided on by the Minister of Human Resources Development, in an area of jurisdiction assigned to the provinces in the Constitution Act, 1867, an area of exclusive jurisdiction, not shared jurisdiction. Over the years, the federal government has encroached upon this exclusive provincial jurisdiction, pleading the right to spend the money of Canadians and of Quebecers.
Coming back to the cuts in transfer payments, it should be noted that the $2.5 billion figure quoted for all three categories combined in the Canadian social transfer is within $100 million of the cuts announced in the green paper with respect to post-secondary education. This leads to the conclusion that, give or take $100 million, the primary target of government cuts is post-secondary education.
By giving the provinces the choice while maintaining national standards, as it claims to do, the federal government will prompt the target groups benefiting from the three elements of the Canadian social transfer to turn against their provincial governments or fight among themselves to avoid cuts.
The federal government will create a situation where students will be competing with UI and welfare recipients. Our young people are the ones mainly concerned by these three programs.
In January 1995, there were 363,000 unemployed youth between the ages of 15 and 24 in Canada, over 100,000 of whom are in Quebec. If you add to that youth on relief-over 74,000 young people are on welfare in Quebec alone, but I do not have the total number for Canada-it makes for a terrible situation. It goes to show how little compassion this government has had for young people.
In light of a $2.5 billion cut in transfer payments to the provinces, combined with an additional 10 per cent cut in the UI program, the Minister of Finances was able to save enough last year to meet his targets. To meet his deficit reduction target for this year, the minister had to use the unemployment insurance fund, which now shows a surplus.
So to compensate for his improvidence, the Minister of Finance made cuts in unemployment insurance. The neediest in our society have to compensate for the incompetence of the Minister of Finance. This is appalling.
So what does the minister do to make his budget look good? He announces a temporary tax, for two years, that will raise $100 million from large deposit-taking institutions. But meanwhile, the government also makes cuts totalling $2.5 billion at the expense of the unemployed.
I see members of the Human Resources Development Committee who toured Canada with me. Like me, they were met by demonstrations in all major cities. Like me, they listened to the complaints of young people and the unemployed, especially in the Maritimes, about the cuts that will affect them. We will not be able to last until spring, was what we heard from the victims of seasonal unemployment. We heard them all, especially young people.
Today, as a result of a reduction in benefit periods, many are starting to feel the impact of cuts that were introduced last year. However, the $2.5 billion saved were, I repeat, used by the Minister of Finance to meet his budget target.
This is shocking, especially when we realize that last year, the banks made a record profit of $4.1 billion, and some banks managed to avoid paying any taxes at all. I am about to finish, Madam Speaker.
There are also the tax shelters. What did the minister do? Yes, indeed, the response to the official opposition's call for this for the past year and a half, was the announcement that implementation would take effect in 1999. That is impressive. They make the announcement four years ahead of time to the people who enjoy the benefit of family trusts, so that they can consult experts and find other ways to avoid paying tax. Four years ahead of time.
When could a Minister of Finance provide a better example, when does he tell interested parties four years ahead of time? We are not talking about the disadvantaged here. He did not warn the disadvantaged last year. He cut $2.5 billion dollars and, again this year, he is waiting for his budget speech to take effect and another 10 per cent cut is announced. We are supposed to find this funny? I do not find this funny at all, because I come from a riding where MIL Davie shipyards, among others, is located and where 2,000 jobs were lost. These people, who lost their jobs, are affected by the cuts to unemployment insurance and are now on social assistance. They are not finding this funny.
In the proposed reform, 90 per cent of associations, in addition to demonstrations, said no to Axworthy's reform and said no to the so-called improvements to the system. We know that increasing educational costs increases the debt load of students, at a time when there have already been 1,000 student bankruptcies in Quebec. Over 10 per cent of personal bankruptcies in Canada involve students or young people.
We ask them to give thought to the future. A fine message. A fine message, indeed. As the hon. member for Rosemont said, more and more Quebecers are realizing that, with no measures to enable people who want to return to the labour market, no active measures, a choice will soon have to be made. More and more Quebecers are realizing that the choice they have to make in the Quebec referendum in order to get out of this system that offers them little for the future is to vote "yes" in the referendum on sovereignty.