Mr. Speaker, I am pleased to participate in the prebudget debate. As a member of the finance committee since 1997 I have had the honour to travel across Canada to listen to what Canadians from all walks of life have to say.
I can carefully say that the mood of the Canadian people is that they are quite relieved that the fiscal house of Canada is in order. They are looking forward to more good news. To put it in context, when I became a member of parliament in 1993 and the government took office unemployment in Canada was 11.2%. In addition, we were faced with a $42 billion deficit.
There is no doubt that each and every Canadian was called on to bear a share of the burden of getting our fiscal house in order. It was an imperative. Not only was unemployment high, not only did we have this deficit, but the debt to GDP was rising. It meant that there was pressure on interest rates. It was a scenario that was not sustainable.
As a result of the sacrifices that Canadians have made, as a result of the prudence that the government has exercised and as a result of the good fiscal management and fiscal responsibility demonstrated by the government, there is good news.
Let me give a few key points. The real gross domestic product advanced 4.7% in the third quarter of this year, its fourth consecutive quarter. The real consumer spending posted its third consecutive quarter of strong growth with an increase of 4.8%. Real business investment has grown at an average rate of 11.3%. Real goods and services exports surged 15% in the third quarter. The current account balance improved dramatically from a $7 billion deficit to a second quarter surplus of $2.6 billion in the third quarter.
The healthy economic growth has translated as well into robust job creation. Since December 1997 over 760,000 jobs were created and 199,000 of those new jobs were for young Canadians. The unemployment rate has declined. It is now at a rate of 6.9%. That is its lowest level in Canada since August 1981, virtually a generation ago. Both the International Monetary Fund and the OECD expect Canada to lead G-7 countries in employment growth in 1999 and 2000. Inflationary pressures remain subdued. The consumer price inflation was 2.3% and excluding food and energy the inflation was only 1.6%. Those are technical points but they paint a picture which indicates to Canadians that we have our fiscal house in order.
On November 2 the Minister of Finance took the opportunity to address Canadians in his annual fiscal update. During that update he laid out the scenario as he saw it, using prudent assumptions and responsible fiscal management, looking at the fundamentals, and accepting the advice of the experts in business and industry and the economists of our country.
I will quote from the closing of his speech which should give Canadians the confidence that the next budget will reflect a step in the right direction of addressing the fact that Canadians have taken a great deal of the burden over all the years we have taken to balance the budget and finally get into a surplus position.
The finance minister said:
We will strengthen our economy. We will bring down taxes. We will recast the foundations of individual security. We will forge a culture of innovation. We will build upon our traditional industries and we will build a society that nurtures its children like no other.
Canadians should be very encouraged by the state of the fiscal house of Canada. It is time for Canadians to start discussing the strategies they would like to see in terms of how we put these things in place.
As the finance committee travelled across Canada and consulted with Canadians, it will come as no surprise to members and to Canadians at large that depending on whom we were talking to at the time the interest areas were certainly different.
Young people in university talked to us about the cost of education. They asked us if they could get lower tuitions, if they could get better assistance for post-secondary education, a very important and noble request that has to be looked at. At the other end of the spectrum, a growing segment of the Canadian population, our seniors, told us their concerns were the health care system and the social security benefits that allow them to live in the dignity they have earned and to which they are entitled.
Small businessmen told us that they wanted to see changes in the corporate tax structure for small businesses, the business sector that generates the most jobs in Canada. They wanted to know if they could get an increase in the small business limit from $200,000 to $400,000.
People spoke on behalf of families and children before the finance committee. They talked about the fairness and equity of our tax system, the taxation of families with children and the issue of one income versus two. They talked about the EI system. They talked about debt reduction. Large business groups and organizations talked about the need to improve benefits under our registered retirement savings plans because they want to be able to provide for their retirement down the road.
Virtually every segment of society had representation. The disabled had an excellent representation by Community Living which came before us and talked about how important it was to address the needs of the disabled of our country. Disabled persons often do not get an opportunity to enjoy the dignity and quality of life of other Canadians because so much of their time, energies and resources are dedicated to meeting their basic needs of health and dignity of life. It is a very important issue.
Members would agree, no matter what party they may come from, that the needs of Canadians are diverse. It is incumbent upon the government to balance those needs on a priority basis and to ensure that when the budget comes forward we maintain fiscal prudence. The finance minister reminded us that we will not go back to a deficit ever again. Canadians can bank on that. The application of fiscal prudence and fiscal responsibility will ensure the sustained growth of our economy, which means more people will have jobs, have the dignity of those jobs, and enjoy Canadian life as every other Canadian.
It really gets down to productivity. We had a study last year in the finance committee on productivity. In that study there was some disagreement among the experts about what it really meant, but I think they all concurred that at the end of the day it was really an issue of how we improve the quality of life for all Canadians.
In some ways we can do that by delivering benefits directly to Canadians. In other ways it can be done through stimulating the economy or through the economic sector so that we increase the size of the pie and there is more to share with all Canadians. There are many decisions to be made and they should not be taken lightly. We have to acknowledge the important needs of all Canadians regardless of their state in life. I will be splitting my time with the member for Wentworth—Burlington.
My final comments will be with regard to the report of the subcommittee of the finance committee that dealt with the taxation of families. In that report there were four recommendations. The first was to extend parental leave under the employment insurance system to a full year for maternity benefits. It is a very important initiative. I am very pleased that the government has embraced it and will be pursuing it in the next budget.
We recommended that the government look at how to amend the Canada pension plan system to assist Canadians who withdrew from the paid labour force to raise a family so that they do not get penalized in the CPP structure. We also recommended that a new benefit be introduced under the Canada child tax benefit to assist families with children. Finally, we asked the government to look at the child care expense deduction under the Income Tax Act to ensure that it continues to meet with policy objectives.
The report was commented on by many witnesses before the finance committee. I can tell Canadians and all members that its recommendations were well received.