Mr. Speaker, I am pleased to speak on this motion relating to the fifth report of the Standing Committee on Finance.
I must acknowledge the honesty of my colleague across the way for rectifying the facts in response to the question I asked. She corrected herself with respect to social housing, and gave Canadians the truth: that this government has done nothing since 1993 to
build more social housing. She even gave me a scoop, by indicating that she was going to strongly debate in caucus the fact that this government is transferring to the provinces the equivalent of what the entitlement for social housing would be. I congratulate her on the aptness of this remark. I will, moreover, carefully reread today's Hansard in order to get all of the details of what she said.
This motion on the fifth report of the Standing Committee on Finance worries me a little, and the title of the report grabs the reader's attention right away.
The title of the report, "Finish the Job", speaks volumes on the Liberals' intentions. When one reads this report carefully, one sees that they do, indeed, wish to finish the job, the job they are doing on the unemployed, by tightening the requirements for receiving UI benefits. To me, then, this is not a reassuring title, when one knows very well how the Liberals have treated the public since their election. We need only think of the blind cuts this government has made in order to do away with its deficit, unprecedented cuts in areas as important as health, education and social assistance-areas I also care about.
The government's sole purpose is to reduce its deficit by hitting on anything that moves, especially the middle class and the neediest in our society. Not those who take advantage of tax shelters, not the large corporations or the chartered banks. It prefers to attack this part of the population first.
Personally, I agree with deficit reduction. Of course I do. We used to have governments that could not handle their spending power. They would spend taxpayers' money as though it were going out of style, and today we have to pay the bill. So it is absolutely necessary to reduce the deficit.
However, I do not agree with the way the government is going about this. As usual, the government is coasting. It is not meeting all these problems head on. It is trying to avoid them. Its only purpose in life is to tell the public that it is reducing the deficit. This is like having a healthy bank account but not using it to feed your family. It is like going shopping for groceries but not giving these groceries to the people who need them.
The family is the Canadian public, which believed this government, which was elected because it shouted from the roof tops a single word: jobs. Instead of saying it just once, it went so far in its hypocrisy as to say it three times. Everywhere we look in the red book, it says, not once, but three times: jobs, jobs, jobs.
According to the latest forecast given by the Minister of Finance, the federal deficit will have decreased by $25 billion between 1993 and 1998. Let us take a look at how the government managed to do that. Personal taxes, in the meantime, have increased by $23.1 billion since 1993. So there is no longer much of a difference. The money comes from somewhere. We must not fool ourselves.
Obviously, if revenues increase this way, we can certainly lower the deficit. However, have this government's expenditures been reduced accordingly? They have been reduced by only $14.4 billion. So the government is misleading the public to no small extent when it says it has reduced expenditures and that the savings go directly to reduce the deficit. That is not the case.
"Finish the job" simply means that our taxes-direct or indirect-will be increased in the next budget. We run the risk of once again paying for the government's lack of understanding, as the unemployed are already doing.
If people were at least finding work, if our young people were at least coming out of our educational facilities with the hope of finding a job, if parents could at least ensure a modicum of comfort for their children, we could say that the economy is moving and we would not have the social problems we are facing now. However, this is not what is happening.
Our young people are leaving their regions in the hope of finding work elsewhere. I say, "in the hope", because after a while they come back empty-handed.
What we are also seeing is fathers and mothers who must rely on social assistance to survive. What is this government doing? It is reducing its deficit on the backs of these people.
I repeat, we are in agreement with the principle of reducing the deficit, but the way in which this government is going about it, despite its promises, is hurting the public badly.
One approach the Liberal government has taken, and which is still the most unacceptable, is to keep dipping into the unemployment insurance fund over the last three years. This is nothing but a hidden tax on employment.
Of course, they tell us that it is not, but let us ask the following question: Where does the unemployment insurance fund surplus go? We are talking about $5 billion out of the unemployment insurance fund that the government uses every year to lower its deficit.
They keep trying to make us believe in their discourse that the government wants to build up a cushion, for use in the event of a recession, for example. However, at the rate things are now going, the rate it is taking money out of the fund, the cushion it is trying to build up is more like a mattress, a great big overstuffed mattress, whose purpose is not to provide for the lean years, but to reduce the deficit.
We have only to look to our riding offices. What is going on is very revealing. We in the Bloc Quebecois regularly meet with people in employment centres. I do not know if members across
the way do the same. At the present time, employment staff in the human resources development centres are being given training to explain what the new employment insurance program is all about. We know that it will come into effect on January 1, 1997. A number of questions have been asked on that point, and the responses have been evasive enough to prompt newspaper headlines such as "Minister of unemployment insurance-to call it what it is-not familiar with his own files".
This is a new insurance regime, a word I choose because it describes exactly what we are going to see in 1997: the people will be put on a weight loss regime, a diet. For a number of our fellow citizens, our constituents, this may turn into a starvation diet.
What keeps being repeated in the training courses, what the employees, the public servants, are being told, is that the new "regime" is based on the money saved in the unemployment insurance fund. Is this not scandalous?
This means that as much money as possible must be left in the unemployment insurance fund. This fund must be fattened up as much as possible, instead of being given to those in need of it. The eligibility criteria will be raised so high that, eventually, very few will be able to benefit from it.
When you get elected on a platform of "jobs, jobs, jobs", you can hardly afford to rationalize taking money out of the unemployment insurance fund or premiums. Instead of using the unemployment insurance fund surplus to absorb his deficit, the Minister of Finance should use that money to deal with the unemployment problem.
They are applying bandaid solutions right and left. Have these people on the other side of the House really weighed the pros and cons, have they really thought about the whole unemployment question?
In my region last month, we lost the dubious honour of being the unemployment champions of this country. However, on the weekend, according to the latest statistics, we won the trophy back, with a rate of 15.1 per cent. That was the worst news they got in my region last week.
According to the Labour Market Bulletin for the second and third quarters of this year, many young people are the main victims of the deteriorating situation on labour market.
Among young people in my riding, the unemployment rate is 20 per cent. What is the government doing to turn this situation around? It offers young people absolutely nothing. The exodus of young people will continue. Of course that means that our regional unemployment rate will go down, but the unemployment rate will go up in other parts of the country, in the big cities.
I can hardly ignore the disaster that struck my region and especially my riding last July. In addition to the damage and the buildings that were destroyed, the disaster had an impact on jobs as well. Businesses had to lay off 3,000 persons temporarily. Of that number, many hundreds have yet to go back to their jobs. The tourism industry was hit very hard.
At this very moment, we may be seeing an increase in jobs in certain sectors like the construction industry. And obviously, there has also been an increase in retail sales. That is not thanks to the government but as a direct result of the disaster. When a family loses everything, it has to replace everything it lost. There are hundreds of families in that situation.
With all these job losses, you would have thought the federal government would have set up a special program to provide support for these businesses and the tourism industry and for all those who lost their jobs at that time.
The government provided assistance to non-profit organizations. This assistance came almost immediately, I must admit that. In this sector, the government was indeed present, but in other areas, where jobs were affected most, the only program offered was to owners of businesses who could get federal assistance, provided they hired people to do exceptional work. Let me explain.
Pretend you own a convenience store, a restaurant or a grocery store. You have to lay off your employees, your capital is gone because the business has been closed for six months, and there is an offer to fund a job involving unrelated activities. Try asking a convenience store owner to hire a dressmaker. Try asking a restaurateur to hire a pump operator. It is that crazy.
It is therefore this government, the people opposite, that have lost touch with reality. People do, however, want to work. They want to re-open their businesses. But it has been difficult. We have been unable to find a receptive ear. And yet, we have met these people at all levels, ministers too. The results are not there.
In his next budget, the Minister of Finance will have to recognize, for once, that the people have given enough. They pay enough income tax. Employers need support to keep creating jobs. If the minister sticks to his present course, he will absolutely have to find ways to repair the wrongs he has done.
The Bloc Quebecois has, through its members sitting on the Standing Committee on Finance, submitted a slew of measures this government could use. It is up to you first to read them, examine them, study them in depth and remedy the state of this country's finances.
As I said at the outset, this report "Finish the Job" should join the multitude of government reports gathering dust on the shelves. What this government has to do is not finish the job but get on with it.