Mr. Speaker, I particularly like the emphasis on the hon. member. I appreciate being back in the House and having you in the chair. I know you so enjoy the opportunity of listening to the position of the Progressive Conservative Party on any piece of legislation, but particularly on Bill C-41 which is an act to amend the Royal Canadian Mint Act and the Currency Act.
I find it interesting to follow the hon. member for Winnipeg—Transcona. It shows the diverse views in the House of Commons. Obviously it also shows that philosophically there are many differences in positions put forward.
The hon. member for Winnipeg—Transcona indicated earlier it would be much better to have many more public services and public organizations and he talked about CN and its privatization. I can assure you, Mr. Speaker, that the hon. member for Winnipeg—Transcona would prefer to nationalize Coca-Cola and have all such services provided by government as opposed to private sector corporations.
Bill C-41 was introduced in the House on May 7, 1998. From the beginning our party has opposed the bill and we will continue to oppose the bill. The bill would allow the construction of the Royal Canadian Mint's new plant to manufacture coin blanks to compete with a plant that is already in the private sector. We believe that the mint has not been forthcoming with Canadians on the new facility.
The member for Winnipeg—Transcona spoke glowingly about the potential opportunities for the new plant. It is interesting that the plant is adjacent to the member's riding. It is also interesting that the plant is located in the riding of a minister of the crown, a member of the government, the foreign affairs minister.
Let us talk about the bill just a little bit. The minister mentioned that we have great pride in our Canadian currency and our mint. That is true. I suggest that this can still be maintained without having to put forward a capital expenditure of some $30 million to compete with the private sector. The private sector company mentioned by the Reform Party was Westaim which I will get to a little bit later.
I would say philosophically, and the government has said so itself in previous comments, that what the private sector can provide should be provided by the private sector and not by government. There should not be direct competition between the government and the private sector.
The bill will go back to committee. The minister also said let us take it to committee, discuss it, look at it, make the necessary changes and bring it back to the House. I would appreciate that that happened, but unfortunately I have lost a bit of my confidence and faith in the committee process. When members of the opposition put forward amendments to legislation that will make the legislation better for all Canadians, it seems that the committee does not bring forward those amendments.
In this case I wish beyond hope the committee would listen to what I consider to be very logical amendments that would be brought forward and amend the bill to improve it. As mentioned by a number of other previous speakers there are very serious areas of concern with respect to Bill C-41. I will review some of the facts and arguments members of my party have discussed in this case.
Through Bill C-41 the Liberal government has moved to increase the borrowing authority of the Royal Canadian Mint allowing it to build a coin plating plant, another patronage plum in the backyard of the Minister of Foreign Affairs. This facility would put the mint into direct competition with Westaim of Fort Saskatchewan, Alberta.
Because the world market for coin blanks is shrinking, either Westaim will be forced out of business and 110 employees will be in jeopardy or else the Royal Canadian Mint's new venture will go down in flames. Taxpayers will be on the hook for those additional operating costs as well as debt servicing costs of an additional $30 million for a plant.
We have a corporation right now that provides the service to the Royal Canadian Mint. That corporation will be in jeopardy. Why is it put in jeopardy? Because a $30 million expenditure of indirect Canadian taxpayer dollars will go to compete against the private sector corporation. It is not a level playing field.
Westaim is a legitimate successful Canadian business that has supplied the Royal Canadian Mint with coin blanks for 35 years. I wish the members from the NDP would listen. There are 110 employees in this corporation who may well be in jeopardy if this plan of the Royal Canadian Mint goes ahead.
The entry of the Royal Canadian Mint into the industry would jeopardize this Westaim division and its employees. Industry experts agree that the market for coin blanks will experience a slight blip in demand for the Eurodollar, which is to come on in the next number of years, and then continue its steady decline as electronic transactions become more popular and the need for coinage and paper currency declines.
This is not some crystal ball gazing. This is reality. There is not going to be a need for the coin blanks, the currency, because of electronic transfers. We are now going to have overcapacity within the system with the Royal Canadian Mint having to compete with this private sector. The new coin plating plant will not only replace Westaim as the source of coin blanks but will compete in the world market.
The costs of getting the mint into the coin blank business are enormous. The $30 million announcement is just to build the plant. Start-up costs are substantial for a new competitor in the mature to declining market.
The mint will have to compete against established, experienced well entrenched competition that has years to build expertise and economies of scale. Not only will the Royal Canadian Mint have to continue with a high cost structure but it will, like any brand new business, make mistakes.
We recognize that any time government gets into business, there are many inefficiencies and many mistakes. We expect that the mistakes will come at the cost to the Royal Canadian Mint and indirectly back to Canadian taxpayers.
The Reform member mentioned 30% overcapacity. That overcapacity in the industry right now is between 30% and 40%.
With the entry of the mint into this market, it will likely either drive Westaim and the 110 employees out of business or else go spectacularly down in an inefficient operation with capital losses and operating losses to the Canadian public.
Even though there is no direct subsidy being proposed in this venture because all moneys spent by a crown corporation reduce dividends paid back to the crown, ultimately the taxpayers are the ones who pay.
Westaim still has an unresolved lawsuit against the mint involving the softening process necessary to make the coin blanks. The mint cannot legally proceed with this venture unless it settles both these outstanding matters, yet construction started in March.
There was no funding available to the Royal Canadian Mint under law to start the construction of the plant. However, the construction of the plant began in March 1997.