Madam Speaker, we are debating today a private member's motion introduced by my hon. colleague from the Bloc proposing some changes to the new EI system. We find the change in wording from UI to EI just a little difficult.
What my colleague is proposing is to make “major changes” to the EI system. He is proposing lower contributions and increased benefits for both seasonal workers and for new entrants to the labour market. That is what we are talking about today.
The hon. parliamentary secretary for the government pointed out that since the new EI system is barely in its infancy, it is not the time to make major changes. He also argues that there have been some fairly significant elements of the new EI program to help both seasonal workers and to help those who are new entrants to the job market.
That is the point of debate, to have proposals for change, to have the merit of those debated. I hope I can add a few cogent and helpful thoughts to our deliberations on this motion.
The main point of this motion is to talk about the need for lower contributions, to lower the contribution, to lower the amount of money going into the EI system.
As has already been pointed out, the surplus in the EI fund will reach $14.9 billion by the end of this fiscal year. That is a fairly big chunk of money. In fact, it is about as much as the GST takes out of the economy. Now we have another $15 billion being taken out and in surplus with the EI fund.
It has been said many times in this House before—I do not think it has really been rebutted or denied—that high payroll taxes particularly discourage employment and discourage hiring.
Here we have a government elected on the promise of jobs, jobs, jobs in 1993. That was their rallying cry for Canadians. Yet in the four years the Liberals have been running the affairs of our country they have done tremendous damage to the job creators of this country.
Taxes keep rising. Here we have a totally unnecessary chunk taken out of the hides of employers and workers in this country simply so the finance minister can brag about what a good job he has done in getting rid of the deficit. Sure, if you tax everyone to the max you should not have to borrow any money. That is nothing to brag about but that is essentially what has happened.
On top of the tax increases which have been $24 billion more revenue taken in by this government than when it was elected, there will be $15 billion from the EI surplus. There is another $10 billion a year coming out of our pockets for the increase in the Canada pension plan premiums. We wonder if the finance minister and the government think Canadians are made of money.
Then the Liberals play the violin and put their hands over their hearts about child poverty. It is no wonder our families are poor. It is a wonder our families are able to eat anymore with all the taxes, taxes and taxes this government seems to feel so free to rip out of our pockets on an ongoing basis.
Here we have one that has proven to be unnecessary. It is a surplus in a fund that is to help unemployed people. It is like being forced to pay $30,000 for a $20,000 car. We wonder why we must have a system that costs far more than it is acknowledged is appropriate.
We must agree with my colleague from the Bloc that there should be and must be lower contribution rates to the EI program. Cutting EI expenditures in terms of premiums needed to operate the system would save most working Canadians about $300 a year, and $300 could buy a lot of milk for poor children in the country. It could buy a lot of warm clothing for our children. It could make sure our mortgages get paid and the heat bills get paid. But no, this taxaholic finance minister needs that money to play with, and so of course we have to keep paying unnecessary dollars into the hands of this government.
Therefore the real engines of job creation, the small and medium size businesses, are actually penalized unnecessarily for every single person they hire. It is no wonder hiring is cut back. When every person you hire takes a big chunk of your profits and your business capital naturally you will conserve and hire as few people as you can possibly get away with instead of expanding your business and the economic opportunities in this country. I am not quite sure how long it will take some people in the House to realize that and to seriously deal with it, in particular those on the government side.
I would say to the government that as long as this government keeps EI premiums unnecessarily high, Canadians have every right to say that it is not really serious about job creation in this country.
The EI surplus has been used for fully 22% of deficit reduction, which means that over $1 in every $5 that the finance minister is bragging that he is no longer borrowing is made possible because workers and business people are subsidizing his deficit reduction efforts by 22%. Sometimes you have to balance the cost and the benefit of some of these measures.
Canadians' disposable income at the same time has decreased. It has decreased by about $3,000 per family since this government was elected. Three thousand dollars per family would buy a lot of milk, a lot of warm clothing and would make sure our families had adequate shelter. But this heavy increase in taxation, of which this EI surplus is just a part, is responsible for a tremendous amount of the suffering in this country.
The Business Council on National Issues states tax cuts would help alleviate the problem of child poverty. The BCNI also said it is terrifying that many low and middle income Canadians face this steep tax burden and that this government is sitting on a time bomb on taxation.
I urge the government to recognize the suffering and the hardship being caused to Canadians by its insatiable appetite for our tax dollars so that it can politically brag about what it has done or is going to do. It is nice to do these things, but they must be done in a way that is fair to the only source of revenue in the country, hard working Canadians.
The government really must be serious about this change. The parliamentary secretary said in the debate that the new hires program waives or does not collect the UI premiums for jobs that businesses create this year under the program, absolutely underlining and acknowledging the fact that these job taxes are keeping new jobs from being created. If these job taxes were not a significant factor, why did the government tell businesses they will not have to pay them as long as they hire new people? It knows this is an impediment and that is why it has removed it under the new hires program. It has also put in place the family income supplement for low income Canadians, again acknowledging that under our tax regime low income Canadians cannot make ends meet.
On behalf of struggling families I appeal to the government not to continue taking these dollars out of the pockets of hard working Canadians who are trying desperately to care for their families and make ends meet.