Mr. Speaker, I am pleased to participate in the debate on the Reform Party motion, which proposes to replace Canada's current social security system with a registered personal security plan.
From the outset, the wording of the motion reflects its underlying philosophy or principles. The Reform Party wants to replace a social security system with a personal security plan. A
social security system is a plan designed to look after the needs of the poor, so that they have the minimum required to live in adequate conditions. On the other hand, a personal security plan concerns a single individual, namely its beneficiary. Such a system has no social dimension: it only concerns the individual.
The underlying principle of that proposal is obviously the prevailing ideology within certain groups promoting a free market, the law of the jungle and the "every man for himself" philosophy. This is not the principle which guided the building, in Quebec and in Canada, of the current social, economic and even political structures.
This morning, I listened to the hon. member for Calgary North, who mentioned some countries which had set up plans somewhat similar to the one she is proposing. She referred to the United Kingdom under Mrs. Thatcher and Chili under General Pinochet.
I do not think these examples would be acceptable to people who have any social conscience at all. The British experience under Mrs. Thatcher, for the past fifteen years or so, was not a particularly happy one. If we compare that experience with the option chosen by France which has taken a different approach to managing and funding social programs, we realize that people in the U.K. are not better off financially than people in France, at present.
As for Chili under General Pinochet, we need only consider what happened during that period and what this every man for himself, this free market ideology produced. It produced torture, deregulation and anti-union behaviour and made the poor even poorer. I do not think people would welcome that kind of system in Canada, especially since we recently had another example of a government that applied this ideology.
Which country was mentioned in glowing terms by the International Monetary Fund? Which country was, in recent years, applauded for its privatization model? Which country was cited as an example for its cuts in social programs? It was Mexico. And look at where Mexico is today. This is a country that wanted to implement a foreign ideology, a country that took steps that had a disastrous impact, first on the poorest in Mexican society and later on the entire Mexican economy.
We cannot disrupt people's lives for ideological reasons, and we cannot apply half-baked theories developed by academics in their ivory towers. We cannot just go ahead and blindly apply these ideologies to advanced societies like ours.
Clearly, I do not support the motion presented by the Reform Party. I intend to analyse it, however, because there are some aspects that must be condemned outright and that are downright shocking.
First of all, the motion proposes to reform existing social programs which are said to be failing, an expression that has a certain currency among certain groups. Who says social programs are failing? The people who do not need them.
Why do we have social programs in Quebec, in Canada, in the western world? Workers and the least well-off have always sought protection against poverty resulting from sickness, unemployment and old age. Often, when people can no longer work because of age they are poor if they had only their job as a source of income.
Western society, has always, and particularly in the past 20 to 30 years, sought protection against the poverty resulting from these scourges. I think they have clearly succeeded. We have health care programs to help the sick, unemployment insurance programs to support those who have lost their jobs and old age security programs to provide a decent standard of living to seniors who have worked all their lives.
I do not know how we can claim these programs are ineffective. I think Canadians and Quebecers know what is involved; they want to keep their social programs. I have two personal examples for you that will confirm what I am saying.
When the Minister of Human Resources Development tabled his proposed social reforms, I called a meeting in my riding for anyone interested in the subject. Some 200 people showed up-people from community groups, the unemployed, union people-These people made it clear to me that we had to protect the social programs we enjoy in Canada today. We might have to change them a bit, but the conclusion was that they had to be protected.
My second example is the petition given me by the movement known as Solidarité populaire, Saguenay-Lac-Saint-Jean. This petition contains nearly 11,000 names requesting the minister to keep the social security safety net in Quebec and Canada.
In the light of such a showing, I can only support those who elected me, particularly because I share their beliefs, and insist that the government maintain the social programs we currently have in Canada, adjusting them as necessary to suit circumstances and to improve their effectiveness.
We hear a lot about the cost of social programs. Of course, unemployment insurance, old age security and health insurance cost money. To some extent, we can surely limit expenditures. We need think only of the duplication of federal and provincial initiatives, which we could stop.
We could also consider cutting expenses by adapting certain programs to reduce their costs and so that the people running them give greater thought to costs. Given the effects of these programs in social terms, I do not think that current costs are exorbitant.
The problem with these issues of cost is the lack of fiscal resources. Why are we lacking fiscal resources in Canada? Because our policies on employment are ineffective.
Certain circles, especially people from the Reform Party, have the following to say about employment policies: "We do not need to have a policy on employment, because jobs are created by the private sector". This point of view is slowly winning over some of our friends opposite, from the Liberal Party. What a pity. Although it is true that business creates jobs, in advanced societies like ours, the government should blaze the trail and take job creation initiatives whenever there is a need.
I am not suggesting that we introduce initiatives based uniquely on a certain ideological or theoretical framework. We must look at the needs of the population and make sure that they are met, to the extent that this is possible.
I would like to move on to a more thorough critique of the Reform Party proposal, as regards a personalized system. The concept of universality would be thrown out. People who have contributed to a plan would be able to use it, and people who have not made contributions, well, who knows what would happen to them. The principle of universality is important, because it acknowledges a citizen's right to receive services by virtue of being a citizen, and, if all citizens have equal rights, they should all have access to many different kinds of services, like health care, education, social security and old age security, just because they are citizens.
Of course, those who are better off may possibly, through various means such as taxation, be required to pay back the benefits that they receive, but it still remains true, I think, that in a society, it is important that citizens collectively have the right to certain services, by the simple fact that they are citizens.
Under the personalized system proposed by the Reform Party, everybody would contribute to the plan, everybody would invest money in a fund in order to pay for their own eventual social needs. But, what happens to people who, for one reason or another, do not contribute to the plan? What happens to people who are unemployed, who cannot afford to make contributions? The chronically ill? People whose lack of training prevents them from being part of the active population? What would we do about them? Would we create a dual social security system?
And if we did, how would the people who have to contribute to a personalized plan feel? They will say: "We are already paying, so why should we pay for others?" In that case, will we let the poor pay for the poor? We can already see where a proposal like this one would take us. It would take us to a two-tier society with rich people living well and poor people starving. Quebecers and Canadians alike condemn that kind of society.
The proposal refers to tax-sheltered savings accounts. This means that the personalized system will be tax-deductible in a way. In other words, the Reform Party is saying "every man for himself", except that the state will have to give tax deductions to those who contribute funds to this system. I think that this is a covert way of making the state pay. It is all very well to say: "Yes, people will invest, take themselves in hand, put money aside-"
I heard our Reform colleague explain to us this morning that if you invest so much per year, you end up with a fortune after 15 or 20 years. This reminds me of the financial advisors who visit people in their homes and tell them: "If you deposit $500 every six months or $1,000 a year, with interest rates, you will become a millionaire". After he leaves, you see yourself as a millionaire, but you are not one penny richer.
While we are on the subject, our Reform colleague said this morning while explaining her system's benefits: "Assuming that a person invest so much as such-and-such an interest rate and that this person is never sick or unemployed, he or she will be a millionaire in 30 or 40 years". Such assumptions do not feed the poor, care for the sick or provide our old people with the support they need.
As for tax-deductible RRSPs, you may think, Mr. Speaker, that I am against RRSPs in principle, but that is definitely not the case, neither for me nor for my party.
In fact, in prebudget debates, we spoke in support of not taxing RRSPs, in spite of the fact this currently deprives the Canadian government of $15 billion in revenues, because we think it is not fair to change the rules of the game along the way, after a contract was signed or a tacit agreement has been reached by the government and citizens who invest in RRSPs. It had been agreed that these benefits would not be subject to tax.
As a party, we are not against RRSPs. We do not want RRSPs to become taxable, but at the same time we cannot understand why one would want to apply the RRSP formula to everyone in our society.
I see that I am running out of time, but I would just like to address one issue that our colleague raised this morning. What happens to those who invest in RRSPs if something goes wrong with the economy, if banks go under, if bad investments are made, if our currency is devalued, if the interest rates go down, if there is an economic crisis? I could go on and read you the entire Apocalypse. Many things can happen that will cause funds invested in RRSPs vanish. You could then come up to us and say: "Well, I am poor now. You must help me". If the Reform Party members were in power, here is what they would tell you: "Look here, sir, you made investments and you lost money. You are a loser and losers have no right to ask the society for help. When you lose money, you lose money, and you shut up".
Basically, the Reform Party's proposal is for the rich, the healthy and the educated.
The other problem with this proposal is this: these funds can and should be drawn only in an emergency. The proposed plan would replace the Unemployment Insurance Plan, the manpower training programs and the pension plans.
What happens when an individual has the misfortune to become unemployed repeatedly over the course of several years, if he has the misfortune to be ill and therefore unable to contribute to his pension plan? What happens if that he drains his personal registered savings plan and ends up with nothing to fall back on.
I think that the Reform Party's proposal takes a rather simplistic view of society and public finance. They are telling us that the public finance problem would be resolved if there were no public expenditures, which is rather simplistic, since it is so obvious. Except that public spending exists precisely because there is a public, a population, whose needs must be taken into account by politicians.
Solutions such as the one proposed by the Reform Party may seem attractive to someone watching us on television, while relaxing in the living room. However, such solutions are not acceptable to the needy.
In conclusion, since my time is running out, when faced with proposals such as this one from the Reform Party, we must remind our fellow citizens and politicians what social solidarity, society and community living are all about. Nowadays, these realities are too often forgotten. We hear about personal success, free market and registered personal security plan. This is a self-centred philosophy. I will not make a long speech about sacrificing everything, including ourselves, to help others, but we live in a society and we have a responsibility toward social solidarity.
I invite Reform members to reflect on life in a society and to realize that we do not live only for ourselves but also for others, who also live for us. This is how we can all function in a society. And this is what we hope to preserve for a long time to come in Canada and in Quebec.