Mr. Speaker, I am pleased to rise in the House tonight to speak to the prebudget debate.
I would like to echo the comments made by my colleague from the Bloc who talked about the need to have an anti-poverty law in Canada. I think that is something that should be a real priority for this government.
The Liberal government loves to boast about its fiscal record on battling the deficit, but the government is much less comfortable talking about the social deficit it has created in the process.
Today Canada stands accused in the court of world opinion of fighting the deficit on the backs of the poor. In its report on Canada the United Nations committee on economic, social and cultural rights expressed its deep and grave concern on 25 issues relating to Canada's treatment of its most disadvantaged citizens.
In the words of the committee chair:
I would not be surprised to hear about these things from a developing country. But, in a very well developed country like Canada, with so many resources—the degree of homelessness and poverty is really quite shocking.
It needs to be pointed out that Canada was a signatory to the UN covenant on economic, social and cultural rights which lays out the basic foundation for equality and rights, and which should be the law that my colleague just spoke about, the basis on which we could eliminate poverty in this country.
If we were to read the finance committee's majority report on its prebudget consultations we would wonder if it was talking about the same country.
The Liberals claim in their majority report that “As its finances have improved over the past five years, the government has introduced several new programs designed to help build a strong and compassionate society”.
That sounds very wonderful. In fact the Liberal members on the finance committee think that Canada is in such good shape that the best thing the finance minister could do in his upcoming budget is to give huge tax breaks to Canada's upper income earners.
Is this the same country that the UN committee condemned for exacerbating poverty and homelessness during the time of strong economic growth and increasing influence? Yes, it is.
Last year, with a balanced budget in sight, we were supposedly on the cusp of a golden age. After years of budget cutting and zero inflation policies, the big question before the committee was how to spend the fiscal dividend. In fact the finance minister was delighted to announce a new fiscal milestone every time he stood up. As it turns out, the fundamentals are weaker than they have been since the 1930s, and the 1990s are shaping up to be a lost decade.
In fact per capita GDP has not risen through the decade. Real living standards have declined for a majority of Canadians and are at desperation levels for the growing numbers of poor.
While governments retreat behind slogans about market discipline and fiscal responsibility, the reality is that in our local communities health care bleeds to death from a thousand cuts.
More than half a million more children have fallen into poverty and students seeking education are pushed into a lifelong debt, if they can afford it.
The training system in the country is awash in chaos and confusion.
The majority of the unemployed are denied benefits, while a surplus of $20 billion accumulates in the government accounts.
Canadian farmers are killing their livestock rather than facing complete ruin trying to market them.
On the streets of our largest cities homelessness has been declared a national disaster. That is the reality that is facing a growing number of Canadians today.
Meanwhile, out in the market economy, the top 10% of income earners have increased their share of national income by a factor of 15. Today those folks earn 314 times the income of the bottom 10% of Canadians, up from 21 times in 1973.
It is in this climate that the Business Council on National Issues urged the finance minister to make the courageous choice and support major tax cuts for those earning up to $150,000 a year. It is in this climate that the Liberal majority on this committee is now pushing tax cuts for upper income Canadians as the number one priority for government spending.
Last year one of the finance minister's proudest boasts was that he had cut government spending back to 1949 levels. The impact of this year's recommendations will be to lock in downsized government, to promote private wealth while the public sector deteriorates, and to ignore the genuine needs of Canada's poor and unemployed whose lost benefits have paid for the finance minister's budget. It is my constituents in Vancouver East and in other low income communities who have paid the price for the government's attack on low income Canadians.
Last December the finance minister called child poverty a national disgrace. He said that the elimination of child poverty should be a great national objective. That is very worthy. He said it should be on the scale of the battle to reduce the deficit. But to date there is no indication that the federal government plans to do anything to ease the financial burden on poor people.
Later in 1998 two major reports condemned the federal government for its record on child poverty. The Canadian Council on Social Development noted that the number of food banks operating in Canada had doubled in the 1990s. The National Council on Welfare reported that only 17% of single parent families, the poorest of the poor, will get the so-called child tax benefit. Overall only 36% of poor families will get any benefit from this much wanted government solution to child poverty.
Despite the finance minister's supposed concern and the fact that our justice minister calls poverty our most glaring human rights problem, the new government approach to child poverty has done absolutely nothing. What the government really wants to do is define poverty out of existence.
According to StatsCan we have 1.5 million children and some 3.8 million adults living in poverty under what we call the low income cut off, which is the commonly understood poverty line in Canada. By changing the definition, essentially dropping the income floor by about 20%, governments could remove 1.8 million people with the stroke of a pen, including 500,000 children, from the nation's poverty rolls.
The government likes to say that the child tax benefit—and we have heard this so many times—is designed to improve benefits for low income families with children, to reduce the depths of child poverty and to promote attachment to the workforce. What the government does not say is that the poorest of the poor are denied the benefits, those on welfare. The government does not say that because of clawbacks the child tax benefit effectively denies benefits to roughly half a million poor families on welfare.
It does not say that parents unfortunate enough to lose their jobs will be made poorer by cuts to employment insurance benefits and will likely be denied benefits in training. It does not say that its newest approach to reducing the depth of poverty for families might be to drop the floor by over $6,000, handily reducing the depth of poverty by two-thirds.
What is needed is not a new definition, but a real commitment by this government in this budget to set targets to reduce unemployment and to set targets to reduce poverty for all Canadians living below the StatsCan unofficial poverty line.
If the Liberal government had a shred of sincerity about addressing poverty it should expand the program, end all the clawbacks and index the benefits to the cost of living.
A week or so ago I concluded a national tour across Canada on homelessness in this country. One of the things I learned from housing activists and anti-poverty activist in places like Toronto, Moncton, Winnipeg, northern Manitoba, New Brunswick and in my riding of Vancouver is that more and more people are feeling the impact of the abandonment of the national housing program by the federal Liberals since 1993.
This is one of the true tragedies in this country. One of the real causes of growing inequality and poverty is the lack of housing and increasing homelessness. The government must take real measures on this in the budget. We have seen this situation in Toronto. Although there are many Liberals from Ontario who are hearing a lot about what is going on in Toronto, we have a national disaster on our hands when it comes to homeless and lack of adequate housing.
In this budget we expect and demand to see an investment by the federal government to get back into the provision on the supply side of housing and work with the provinces to ensure that there is indeed a national housing plan. Canada is the only industrialized country that does not have a national housing plan.
I would just like to say a few words about health care because that too, like homelessness, is a growing crisis. The crisis in health care is evident in the growing numbers of Canadians who are losing confidence in the system. In May 1991 over 60% of Canadians rated the system as excellent or very good. By 1998 less than 30% of the population could support that claim.
Canadians are growing skeptical because they look around and experience a system in crisis. They know there are longer waiting lists and delays in treatment, crowded emergency rooms, lack of beds, nursing shortages, diminishing access to care, higher drug costs and the list goes on and on.
On a cumulative basis $15.5 billion in federal cash transfers have been withdrawn from the system since 1995-96. Privatization is increasing as well. For example, essential tests such as the MRIs in Ontario are increasingly being made available to the well who can pay for them rather than the sick who need them.
The New Democratic Party believes that health care has to be a number one priority. Our prescription for health care is to reinvest $2.5 billion into health care in the upcoming budget, to restore funding to the health protection branch, to conduct an independent audit, to stop the slide toward private for profit health care by reinforcing and enforcing the principles of the Canada Health Act and to convene a national summit on health.
I would like to move now to another key issue before us in terms of this budget debate, the EI fund. This year the government expects to bring in $7 billion more in EI premiums than it pays out in benefits. On a cumulative basis we know this now has resulted in a $20 billion surplus while over 900,000 unemployed Canadians have no income support, no access to training and very little prospect of finding new jobs as the economy contracts.
It is clear that government raided the funds to pay down the deficit and that it apparently intends to continue to do so. Meanwhile, less than 40% of the unemployed are receiving benefits today, only 31% of unemployed women and only 15% of unemployed youth.
As part of my tour across Canada on homelessness I talked to unemployed workers who were living in shelters. I remember one young man who gave me his last EI slip for $121. When I told him about the $20 billion surplus and how that really belonged to the workers of Canada, he asked me why he could not get access to that fund for training, to find work and to get help because he did not want to be in an emergency shelter.
What right does the government have to take that money from unemployed workers in Canada? Those funds should be used for retraining, to expand the benefits and to help the unemployed.
But apparently the Liberals see nothing illegitimate about taking that money and using it to subsidize debt repayment, nothing corrupt about seizing it to fund a tax break geared to upper income Canadians. It is precisely because the government cannot be trusted to manage the fund that New Democrats, along with other opposition parties, called for the UI premium account to be separated from overall government revenues as of April 1, 1999 with an independent commission made up of worker and employer representatives.
Theft and misuse of EI funds must be stopped. There is no question about that.
Pumping millions of dollars of spending power back into the hands of Canadians through the EI fund by expanding the benefits and the coverage in some of our poorest communities and regions would strengthen local demand, assist provincial governments coping with increasing welfare caseloads and, more important, would put food back on the tables of the jobless, restore their dignity and bring new integrity to the government's fiscal accounting.
That is what the Liberals and the finance committee should be fighting for. Instead, the central message of the Liberal majority report spending proposals is “the time has come for personal tax reductions directed at middle and higher income Canadians”. Their report calls for a flattening of the progressive income tax by presenting a three year tax reduction plan at a cost of tens of billions of dollars. They call for the elimination of the 3% surtax on incomes over $65,000. The cost, $1.05 billion.
They call for a timetable for eliminating the 5% surtax that applies only to the very high earners. The cost, $650 million. The list goes on and on.
The above plan amounts to tens of billions of dollars of tax cuts depending on how phase-ins are structured and a strong reduction of the tax burden on those who clearly can afford to pay.
Clearly the committee is not interested in the glaring fact that after tax inequalities are increasing in this country or that the poor are falling further and further behind.
New Democrats are concerned about the vast number of Canadians who are being excluded from the Liberal's frame of reference. Do these people even exist anymore to the Liberal government?
Our approach would be to rebuild our deteriorating social infrastructure with health care at the top of the list; restore the unemployment insurance program to the working people of this country; address the glaring issues of inequity around us by addressing the shocking levels of poverty and the widening gap between rich and poor and growing discrimination against the unemployed; to provide proper and timely relief to Canadian farmers devastated by the drop in commodity prices; and to introduce tax relief for all Canadians, as finances permit, with an increase in the GST credit and a 1% tax reduction rate to generate new jobs.
As the Canadian government brings down its last budget before the millennium and as the world celebrates the 50th anniversary of the international declaration of human rights, December 10, 1998, a fitting tribute to the occasion would be a recommitment from this government and from all parties to the standards and rights that we pledged for all our citizens and a budget that starts to address the serious lapses that are a major blot on this country's reputation in the world community.