Mr. Speaker, for those watching this debate. We are now debating a Bloc motion on grants and contributions from the human resources department's main estimates. The Bloc motion calls for $1.3 billion in cuts. Those cuts would cover programs, everything from youth initiative programs to employment assistance programs.
We are all making do with less in these times and government should be no exception. Even though this message is coming from Canadians, the government is not listening. Instead it has actually increased its spending in its first two budgets. This includes substantial increases in its interest spending. The government keeps borrowing money and having to increase spending on interest but it decreases spending on some other things for which we would rather pay.
The Reform approach in dealing with the main estimates for the human resources department was to propose modest 5 per cent reduction in the operating expenses of the various programs under this department. Instead the human resources estimates propose significant increases in spending. This is interesting because it is at a time when the services being delivered by these programs are being significantly cut back to Canadians.
For example, we know that pensions are going to be cut back sometime. That has been announced. We are not sure when or what. We know that unemployment benefits are being cut back. The budget said a minimum of 10 per cent but it could be more than that. We know that health care is being cut back under the Liberal budget. We know that tuition fees are rising because
there is less money available for post-secondary education. The list goes on.
During the time when these benefits and services to Canadians are being cut back significantly, the department that delivers them, instead of getting leaner and more efficient, is increasing its spending significantly.
Reform felt that in fairness to Canadians who were having to take less from this department that the least the department could do would be to operate on at least 5 per cent less money than it asked for from Parliament.
Unfortunately the modest decrease in operating funds of 5 per cent which we proposed was voted down by the Liberal majority on the committee and interestingly by the Bloc members on the committee. In committee the Bloc members did not support even a 5 per cent decrease in spending but in the House they want a $1.3 billion decrease. We find that quite interesting.
Reform proposed a very realistic 5 per cent cut to operating expenditures. This would have been an important first step and one which the government could have and should have been able to live with.
Instead the government is pushing through the votes in the main estimates without even the kind of public scrutiny that we should be able to expect as Canadians from a massive spending program by government. These estimates are being put through without the members of Parliament who hold a majority being able to decrease that spending by even $1.
Whatever government departments ask for, whatever the bureaucrats propose, is what they are being given. Is that any way to show accountability to Canadians? We were elected to oversee the spending of their money as carefully and prudently as possible. No. Whatever is put forward, we just put it through. We will see this later on today. There will be not one vote that will diminish the spending estimates put forward by government departments by even $1. That is not accountability. It certainly does not hold the civil service accountable for the kind of spending they are supposed to be doing of Canadians' money.
This spending affects every Canadian from St. John's to Victoria. We should be looking very carefully at how that goes forward.
Even the Bloc motion on vote 10 that we are debating right now is being countered with a government motion to boost the spending in the area of grants and contributions right back up to where it started. This is in spite of all attempts to give the matter serious consideration.
The Reform Party in February released a budget which we believe the country should operate by. It was called the taxpayers budget. This budget was a direct result of input from our party members at the grassroots level right across the country. What ordinary Canadians were calling for and what was reflected in our budget were reductions to the bloated and inefficient programs, especially funding for special interest groups such as the ones that are funded under the motion we are debating at the moment.
Reformers spoke out loud and clear in this area of government money for special interest groups. We supported cuts in these particular areas and our support is solid.
Also in the taxpayers' budget Reformers were clear that areas of provincial jurisdiction, such as training programs, should not be intruded upon by the federal government. In that one area we agree with our friends from the Bloc and their opposition to some of these requisitions for money that really should not be allocated by the federal government but should be left to the provinces as the Constitution provides.
Many of the grants and contributions in this motion are dealing with services which are the responsibility of provinces. That should be acknowledged and respected.
The Reform plan consisted of a formula for dealing with grants and contributions depending on whether they were provided for businesses or special interest groups. We believe contributions to businesses should be cut on a formula of 100 per cent cuts and that the funding for special interest groups should also be cut 100 per cent. That is our formula.
Let us now look at some of the specific expenditures that are covered under this motion. Part III of the human resources main estimates breaks funding down with vague descriptions only, such as "grants to improve employability and to promote employment opportunities". These are broken down further into what the department calls partnerships. It calls for labour market adjustments-it is scary for the labour market to think that good old government is making adjustments on its behalf-and what the department calls community development projects.
Money from this area is supposedly to be used at the local level to create jobs. The problem is that the expenditure of this money often creates no real long term sustainable jobs at all. They create only artificial jobs or jobs that last only long enough to give an individual enough weeks of work to qualify for unemployment insurance, of course calling for more funding and more money from the government department that started them on this nice cycle in the first place.
These are the sorts of make work projects the government prides itself on, instead of allowing the private sector to energize our economy. This government acknowledges openly
that long term sustainable jobs are created by business, particularly small and medium sized businesses. Instead of allowing these people to keep the money they generate and get on with the job, government spends lavishly and in order to fund that it has to take money out of the pockets of these businesses, which therefore drives us further into debt and stifles the kind of private enterprise that would provide jobs in this country.
The taxes that support the kind of spending we are talking about today are job killers. That is what is happening in our economy. Governments are scooping so much out of it, draining so much out, taking so much out of the pockets of people who are trying to keep the economy going that the economy is suffering and reeling from the shock of this kind of government spending.
The future in getting Canadians back to work is to have a country where companies can hire with minimum amounts of red tape, pay lower taxes than they currently do, have less government tinkering in their affairs, and also have businesses that are able to utilize a workforce that is not dependent on government make work projects.
The economics of the situation is simple. The money the government spends for projects to supposedly increase jobs could be much better spent. It has to come from somewhere. In this case the somewhere is from investors, Canada savings bonds, treasury bills and Government of Canada bonds. When Canadians and foreigners buy those instruments they are really loaning our government money. In order for the government to pay them back for these instruments and pay interest as well it has to tax individuals and companies.
Now the cycle has gone so far that the government is actually borrowing money to pay interest on money it previously borrowed. That is why we are in such trouble. The end result is these so-called make work projects are actually paid for with borrowed money. This is not a healthy situation. It creates a shaky economy and we are seeing signs of that today.
The recovery everybody talked about last year is showing signs of slipping. The robust profit growth of Canadian corporations, private companies that create jobs in this country, slowed in the first quarter of 1995. Operating profits grew by a mere 1.9 per cent in the first quarter, compared with over 10 per cent in the first quarter of 1994. That is a significant, incredible change and downturn. Economic activity also slowed in the first quarter, as the gross domestic product dropped 0.7 per cent in March after a 0.2 per cent drop in February.
There are some real signs the government tinkering in the economy, taking money out of the hands of business people, entrepreneurs and investors, is simply destabilizing the situation, not helping it. Governments cannot run an economy but can only help make it possible for an economy to operate in a healthy way.
Also covered under this motion are grants paid out under the Atlantic groundfish strategy, or TAGS. Over $164 million was allocated to the TAGS program, to be spent over five years. The Minister of Human Resources Development touted this program as being the new face of social programs in Canada.
We have heard many examples of how TAGS has failed in its quest to be a training program and a program to move people from failing industries into healthy ones. This has evolved into simply another income support program. Not only is it creating additional dependency in an area that certainly does not need that and where there is already a lack of hope for viability in the economic sector, but the training part of those funds, the funds that were supposed to be given to people to train them for jobs in healthy labour industries, is now simply being diverted into more income support.
In fact, 80 per cent of the funds for this five-year program have already been spent in the first year. For the remaining four years we have only 20 per cent of those funds left. We also know that a great amount of these funds, we do not know how much, is going to people who are already earning more than a good living in other fisheries activities, such as snow crab fishing.
This is an area that needs to be re-examined. This is a spending area that is not working. There is room for reductions that would be not only not a hardship for people but would actually benefit the economy, because this kind of tinkering simply hurts it instead of helps it.
Also under this motion is about $1 billion of spending on payments to facilitate the efficient functioning of the Canadian labour market. Who better to tell the Canadian labour market how to be efficient than a very efficient government?
It seems to me that if we would leave that $1 billion in the hands of entrepreneurs, business people and investors, that would do more to help the Canadian labour market operate efficiently than anything the government could ever do to teach it to operate better. That would be the best investment we could make: simply let the people who know how to be efficient get on with the job, rather than taking their money and having it inefficiently allocated by bureaucrats, politicians, and grant recipients.
This brings us to another component of the Reform Party's principles that we have been urging the government to follow when it talks about ways to spend better on the social side and stimulate the economy. This is the whole idea of effectiveness in government. It is not too much for Canadians to ask that their government provide them with this fundamental right, the right to have an efficient, effective government. Careless spending by this government and others before it has not been helpful, to say the least. It has put our country in over $500 billion worth of debt and it has left us with a country with a spending problem.
That is why so much funding being provided in all these areas we are talking about has had very dubious results.
We believe that Canadians simply are not getting value for their money. Canadians themselves believe that. In a recent poll published at the end of last week in the Financial Post , a large majority of Canadians really felt they were paying too much in taxes and they were even willing to take illegal measures to avoid paying tax because they felt that governments were wasteful, corrupt, inefficient, that programs were not giving value, and that the money they were giving to government was not giving them bang for the buck. It was not worth the money they were giving up in taxes for what they were getting back. They did not believe the management of it was prudent.
When a large proportion of Canadians say openly to pollsters that their tax dollars are being squandered in a way they do not approve of and are not prepared to support and when their tax dollars produce very little positive result and only lead to unnecessary dependency on the part of many Canadians, then it is time for governments to sit up and take notice, to stop spending that money, stop wasting that money, and to demand less of the taxpayer and more efficiency from government departments.
What we have in this whole business of the estimates is government simply saying to departments: "Spend whatever you want. Spend more on your operations, because we do not expect you to do more with less, like other Canadians". This is why we cannot support the government motion on grants and contributions being put forward today.
Bringing spending under control by cuts in grants and contributions is one way to return the country to a healthy, competitive identity that will let us stand proudly on the threshold of the next millennium.