Madam Speaker, thank you for your support. My voice being as it is this morning, I will have to ask my hon. colleagues to please be as quiet as possible if they want to be able to hear me.
When the budget is tabled at about this time every year, it always raises either fears or hopes in the population, some interest groups, the financial community and all walks of life depending on what is perceived as an improvement in our personal circumstances and whether individuals or organizations consider the latest budget will increase their tax burden or make their lives more difficult.
And each year, since Parliament was established I guess, the opposition has raised numerous questions during this budget preparation period to try to provide guidance to the government and point out where we would not want the budget to hit our most disadvantaged taxpayers. So, representations have been made for as long as there has been governments.
In the past 30 years however, this budget preparation period has become, in Canada and most provinces, but even more so in Quebec, a much greater source of anxiety because expectations are high. There is always a chance the federal government will use the budget to decentralize powers to the provinces and to give them the tax points that go with these powers, so that the provinces can better set their priorities, be it in education, occupational training, public health or social programs.
Finally, this whole period lets us hope for a better future. Unfortunately, budgets rarely come up to everyone's expectations and this one is no exception. Indeed, while some members of our society, some groups were reportedly pleased with the budget measures, others felt short-changed.
In any case, if I had to sum up the level of satisfaction derived from the budget, I, for one, would say first of all that the federal budget cuts in the wrong places. It launches a full-scale attack against the most disadvantaged and slashes social programs, unemployment insurance and the public service. It hardly touches the wealthiest, for example by sparing tax shelters and profits made by banks and large corporations. It does not cut deeply enough in places where fat remains, such as National Defence, business subsidies and duplication.
Second, it is easy to see that there is nothing at all for employment development in this budget. There are no recovery measures or job training. On the contrary, they are using the infrastructure program put in place last year by the same Liberal government to backtrack and reduce municipal subsidies.
In summary, it could be said that this budget is generally unfair, especially for Quebecers, in particular in the agricultural sector, in the area of national defence, and in terms of deficit decentralization and its impact on Quebec's economy.
In the few minutes available to me, I will elaborate on each of these points to try to explain how we arrived at this conclusion.
I said that the government picks on the most disadvantaged, as shown by its handling of social programs. The federal government contributes to social programs by transferring money to the provinces. Between 1994-95 and 1997-98, transfers for social assistance, health care and post-secondary education will go down from $17.3 billion to $10.3 billion. This 40 per cent cut will have a devastating impact on the most disadvantaged.
Next year, Quebec will lose $350 million, and cuts in transfers for post-secondary education could raise tuition fees by over 60 per cent and threaten free college education in Quebec, since the bill is always picked up by the taxpayer. In the short term, these increases would restrict access and lead to low education levels among the poorest, who cannot afford such exorbitant tuition fees.
As far as unemployment insurance is concerned, again this year, the government is cutting UI by 10 per cent. New legislation in the fall will once again slash UI by tightening eligibility requirements and reducing insurable amounts.
These drastic measures will hit those members of society who have trouble finding jobs and may well have to turn to provincially-funded social assistance if they no longer qualify for UI.
This is another form of offloading, since the government takes a UI beneficiary and sends him to the welfare roll. Of course, this means that the person comes under another jurisdiction, since unemployment insurance is a federal program, while social assistance is a provincial one.
Using a logic which I would call perverse, the Liberal government tells us that it considers the unemployed to be cheaters. However, Quebecers refuse to endorse such a view. Even more revolting is the fact that, while cuts are being made to the UI fund, that program shows a surplus of $2 billion and it is estimated that, by 1996, that surplus will exceed $5 billion. Yet, instead of taking that money to help the unemployed find jobs, the federal government uses that surplus to reduce its deficit. Again, this confirms that the government wants to reduce the deficit at the expense of the poor.
As regards the public service, the government intends to abolish 45,000 positions over the next three years. These cuts should be made in a fair manner, based on a prorated distribution between the various groups and also according to the number of federal public servants in each province.
The decision to go all out and cut 40,000 to 45,000 jobs is particularly illogical considering that the government continues to contract out work at an almost unacceptable level, to the tune of $7.7 billion annually, according to PSAC estimates.
In other words, what the government saves by reducing the number of public servants, it spends by contracting out work. As you know, contracting out work is a good way to reward friends of the party, something which is called patronage.
We agree that the government should cut the fat, but this streamlining exercise must not be done exclusively on the backs of public servants. There is fat in many areas, not just in the public service. I already mentioned the transportation services
used by members of this House and of the other place. Why have two services? Both houses could use the same service and save money in the process. I do not want to discuss every public account, but this is a striking example. I could mention many others.
Managers should also be let go, not just members of their staff. The cuts should be spread fairly between management and the employees. This is essential if the Liberal government is going to ensure fairness, as it claims to want to do.
According to the daily Le Droit , 114 managerial positions, out of 12,642, will be cut. This represents 0.9 per cent of all the cuts. By comparison, 2,508 clerical positions out of 40,145 will also be eliminated, which amounts to 6.2 per cent of the cuts. We can see clearly that the proposed cuts will affect seven times more clerical employees than managers, once again penalizing low income workers.
Cuts affecting the wealthy are also by far too timid. First, tax shelters. Nothing has been done about thousands of businesses that do not pay taxes. About 60,000 businesses that have shown a profit for the past few years are not paying taxes on those profits. This is not a matter of tax evasion or trying to manipulate the tax people. Under the current provisions of the act, these companies can take advantage of certain tax loopholes and make a profit without having to pay taxes on those profits.
The government has done nothing to change the 16 tax treaties signed with countries considered to be tax havens. The preferential treatment given by the Liberals to the wealthiest in this country is particularly obvious in the case of the notorious family trusts. The government has deferred taxing capital gains in family trusts until 1999. The Minister of Finance has refused to act on recommendations by the Bloc Quebecois to do something immediately about tax loopholes that deprive the federal government of hundreds of millions of dollars in tax revenue each year, mainly from Canada's wealthiest families.
I think we should recall certain statements made by members of this House when they were in the opposition. In 1992-93, the hon. member for Glengarry-Prescott-Russell had the following to say about family trusts: "The 21-year rule is the Robin Hood in reverse rule. It is designed specifically to give help to those who least need it. Why does one want to give an additional tax break to billionaires?" This is still the hon. member for Glengarry-Prescott-Russell: "It is kind of like having two goalies in the net. In case the puck misses the first one the rich have this extra large hockey stick which can deflect anything right at the back of the first one- It is simply bad and we should not renew those provisions at all". This was said on March 29, 1993. I am pleased to see the hon. member for Glengarry-Prescott-Russell is here to listen, and I hope he recognizes this quote.
Madam Speaker, there is a member of this House who occasionally sits in your chair, the hon. member for Edmonton Southeast, for whom I have every respect and who had the following to say on the same topic: "We should perhaps call it the comfort bill for family trust holders in Forest Hill Village, Rosedale, Upper Westmount, Park Lake Circle and perhaps parts of Shaughnessy in Vancouver. There is no reason why those very few Canadians who are fortunate enough to have family trusts should have preferential treatment. There is no reason to extend what was a more than generous deadline". This was said the same day, on March 29, 1993.
Another hon. member of the government, who, on May 4, 1993 was a member of the opposition, the hon. member for Broadview-Greenwood, whom I also greatly admire, said the following: "When that kind of unfairness- is out there it affects people's spirits and it affects their attitudes in terms of the workplace. When one multiplies that right across the country, it has a devastating effect on productivity, profitability and everything else. The exemption period has been extended indefinitely, depriving us of billions of dollars in tax revenues. I find it really disgusting that we adopted this bill. I am just talking about fairness, not confiscation, about taxpayers who do their fair share". This is what the hon. member for Broadview-Greenwood said on May 10, 1993.
I could go on, but there is another statement, which was made by the hon. member for Gatineau-La Lièvre. I do not want to leave him out, and I want to identify him as well. He said, on April 2, 1993, and I quote: "This government is allowing them to keep accumulating wealth at the expense of the middle class and the poor of this country. What happened yesterday in the House is a disgrace, and the day will come when people will have to answer for certain social injustices". I will quote one last member of this House, who today is a minister-the hon. member for Ottawa South. He said, on March 30, 1993, with regard to family trusts, and I quote: "The answer that was proposed- is to say 21 years is a long enough trust and every 21 years, whether the property is disposed of or not, it will be deemed to have been sold even if it has not and capital gains tax will have to be paid. I do not think we can have any idea how much tax this money could have generated under such an arrangement, but I would think it would be a tidy sum, to say the least".
These people are still around today. They sit in this House. I wonder how it is, only a year or two after making such statements, that they are unable to act on them and acknowledge what they said at the time.
Despite all these statements, the Minister of Finance is refusing to act on the recommendations of the Bloc Quebecois and take immediate action to close these loopholes, which are depriving the government of hundreds of millions of dollars in revenue every year primarily from the major wealthy Canadian families, and I believe I have identified them fairly clearly.
However, to calm widespread taxpayer indignation at the huge bank profits, the Minister of Finance is going to levy a small token tax on banks, a small additional and temporary tax. Accordingly, while billions are cut each year in unemployment insurance-the figure mentioned earlier was something like $5 billion next year-the banks are going to have to pay an additional $60 million this year and $40 million more in 1996-97. Do you think it is going to hurt the banks to be taxed this amount? One hundred million dollars over two years: $60 million the first year and $40 million the second.
I would remind you that the six largest financial institutions in Canada made over $4.28 billion in profits in 1994. The Royal Bank alone made over $1.2 billion in profits.
It is ridiculous to say that everyone is affected by this budget. The government is taking just $100 million from a potential tax source of $4 to 5$ billion and suggesting that this amount is equal to what is being asked of other elements in society. How utterly ridiculous. We could even say this increase is hypocritical, since it may well be passed on to consumers, which banks and large corporations usually do, because such increases are always reflected in the price of these companies' final product.
So in the end, the consumer has to foot the bill. Large corporations are facing a 12.5 per cent tax increase under this budget, which will generate additional revenues of only $460 million over the next three years. This is very small compared to the $1.5 billion to be gained from the increased tax on gasoline. In this case too, the government is trying to show people, through this measure taken by the finance minister, that everyone has to do his bit.
Everyone doing his bit apparently means in this case that some have to make drastic sacrifices while only minimal ones are expected of others. If this is supposed to be a just society, I think we are on the wrong track. Compared to a 12.5 per cent tax hike for major corporations, a very slight tax on the price of gasoline will bring in three times as much or $1,5 billion.
The government boasts that it is not increasing taxes. And yet only a third of new revenues or $900 million which the government intends to collect will come from corporations. The remaining amount of $2.8 billion will come out of taxpayers' pockets. Where is the fair budget we were promised? What happened to the minister's promises that he would above all tax the rich? That being said, Madam Speaker, I would like to quote a few figures comparing personal taxes and corporate taxes.
From 1980 to 1994, personal taxes increased by 70 per cent, a rate indexed for inflation. The source of this information should be reliable and I hope it will not be disputed; it comes from the Finance department. Only the governments in Scandinavian countries and Belgium draw a higher proportion of their revenues directly from their citizens. What has happened to corporate taxes during this period? Let us look at the period extending from 1955 to 1992. In 1955, 25 per cent of federal revenues were drawn from companies. In 1975, corporate taxes accounted for 17 per cent of federal revenues and in 1992, they made up 7 per cent of federal revenues.
So we can see that corporate tax rates are in a free fall. In 1980, the tax rate was 46 per cent for big corporations and 25 per cent for small business. From 1988 to 1995, corporations were taxed at a rate of 28 per cent and small businesses at 12 per cent. It is very clear that the trend has been reversed and that from now on individuals and not corporations will pay more tax to the government.
The latest profits make the following corporations members of the billionaires' club: the Royal Bank, with $1.2 billion, Bell Canada, with almost the same amount-$1.178 billion, and General Motors of Canada, with $1.3 billion. How much tax did they pay? It would be very interesting to see their tax bill, if Taxation would only give it. It would reveal what the government is planning when it talks about a just society.
To elaborate on what I said earlier, the federal government did not trim enough of the fat. I alluded to this earlier when I said that the public service is not the only place where fat could be trimmed-National Defence is another potential target. Its budget will be cut by $1.9 billion over three years. A cut of $4.8 billion over the same time frame is what the Bloc Quebecois has been suggesting for two years now as an alternative to cutting social programs.
Close more bases and cut defence spending more. The Auditor General mentioned that the number of bases could be reduced to 12 without compromising the army's ability to function. In addition, it apparently costs over $125 million just to relocate members of the armed forces within Canada. This was said at the defence committee and echoed at the public accounts committee: between $125 and $130 million per year, not to transport troops to peacekeeping missions, but just to relocate transferred employees. Even with the army doing the transporting, it costs $125 million. That is fat if I ever saw it, Madam Speaker.
Housing for families of members and officers of the armed forces is a losing venture, it loses $30 million per year. Since 1978, the cumulative loss in this area is $2.3 billion. All the while, some officers pay only token amounts for rent, amounts
that are considerably lower than what renting a comparable house would cost on the market.
The Bloc Quebecois is happy to see that Minister Martin has cut business subsidies. He is on the right track in that regard. Congratulations! But the Bloc Quebecois believes his 60 per cent cut does not go nearly far enough.
Even the Conseil du patronat agrees that these subsidies should be dropped altogether. Here is an additional $1.6 billion that could be cut over the next three years. Even business agrees with the Conseil du patronat that these subsidies should be cut, because more often than not, they amount to a means of giving friends of the government a competitive edge.
The money such a move would save could be used to fund social housing, in order to avoid the planned cuts of $307 million over the next three years.
We also talked about the billions of dollars wasted by duplication between the federal and provincial governments. The Liberal government's budget does absolutely nothing to eliminate or even reduce this costly duplication. The federal government is not withdrawing from areas of provincial jurisdiction. It has not abolished the departments where duplication occurs: health, human resources development, natural resources, and we could name others.
It is also not withdrawing from other areas of provincial jurisdiction, such as forestry, mining, tourism, housing, recreation and municipal affairs.
The second point I made was that there is absolutely nothing in this budget for employment. In order to return to the pre-recession level of employment, more than 800,000 jobs would have to be created in Canada. During the last election campaign, the Liberal Party proclaimed loudly that job creation was their number one priority.
And yet, the budget before us contains no measures, either general or specific, to encourage job creation. There is no sign of any overall plan being implemented or even proposed. Nor does the government seem to have any intention whatsoever of taking action in the medium term to help the unemployed find jobs. Even the unemployment insurance surpluses that are supposed to contribute towards job creation will be used to bring down the deficit.
This budget is proof to us that the Minister of Finance has scrapped the red book and given up on doing anything about the present rate of unemployment. The budget forecasts unemployment rates of 9.5 per cent for 1995 and 9.4 per cent for 1996. The Liberal government's vision is cruelly insensitive to the millions of unemployed Canadians. I hope that in this area the federal government's forecasts are more accurate than its forecasts in recent years with respect to the rate of growth, because if it has made the same mistakes, we will be facing unemployment rates of 10.5, 11 or 12 per cent and not 9.5.
As regards job training, this is an area of jurisdiction over which Quebec has been requesting exclusive control for a number of years now, even under a Liberal government. In the present budget, the federal government creates additional duplication, instead of reducing it. It has announced the creation of a human resources investment fund. For the time being we are told that this should encourage solid and sustainable job creation, but we do not have many details yet. It is essential, however, that a provincial job training plan be put in place.
As long as the federal government continues to hang on to responsibility in this area, thus duplicating what is being done by the government of Quebec, many resources and precious time will be lost forever, with disastrous consequences for the job situation in Quebec.
Through its failure to act and its stubborn refusal again in this budget to let Quebec look after its own job training, the federal government is adversely affecting Quebec's economic development.
I would like to touch briefly on the infrastructure program. This $2 billion program, which was announced with great fanfare during the 1993 election, was supposed to create 45,000 temporary jobs over three years. We can only assume the program has gone very well, because the government has decided to terminate it ahead of schedule. This was the only concrete measure that would have helped the government keep its job creation promise, and even that was not followed through on. In fact, the budget cuts the $200 million that remained in this program.
The provincial and municipal governments have been told that they will not get the remaining $200 million federal subsidy that they were counting on, regardless of what they might have hoped and expected. So, $200 million for the federal government, $200 million for the provincial government, $200 million for each of the provinces.
This means a $600 million shortfall in Quebec's economy in terms of infrastructure projects. That is a pretty penny. This government apparently committed to creating jobs is actually pulling out of these projects, thus depriving several municipalities of funding they had been promised. The Minister of Finance would have easily won the lemon award for unkept election promises.
I will comment briefly on this budget which is unfair for the people of Quebec in particular. With respect to agriculture, the
Martin budget is plainly appalling, depriving farmers of $560 million in Crow's Nest subsidies. In Quebec however-
Madam Speaker, you are signalling that my time is up, while I thought I had five minutes remaining. I will therefore keep my other comments for another time.