Madam Speaker, I thank my colleagues for agreeing to that.
I rise to address Bill C-71, an act to implement certain provisions tabled in the budget on February 16. This legislation is an omnibus bill, maybe an ominous bill too. It deals with a number of different issues.
It makes it difficult for an opposition party to vote on a bill like this one when there are so many different things in it. There are parts of it we agree with. There are parts we completely disagree with. It points to the need to have an agreement that legislation tabled in the House be roughly of one kind so that when we address these things we can vote against the legislation knowing that we are voting against a core group of things that we oppose, or support, if there are supportable things in it.
As my colleague from the Liberal Party pointed out, a number of different things are dealt with in this bill. The biggest issues in the bill have to do with health care and the child tax benefit. The Reform Party has already told the government that we support putting more money into health care. We have been arguing for that for a long time. We disagree completely though with how this was done, which is why we cannot support this legislation, unfortunately. We disagree with it on a couple of counts.
We are in a situation where the government cut a tremendous amount of money out of health care initially, somewhere in the range of over $20 billion. Now it is putting $11.5 billion back in over a five year period, and the government is seeking to get some kind of credit for doing that. This is another example of the Canadian public paying more in taxes and getting far less in the form of health care. We disagree with that.
The government should have been up front with Canadians instead of playing this shell game as it does so often. There are many, many examples of how the government plays this shell game. Whether it is with employment insurance, the Canada pension plan, or whatever it is, the government starts out giving people more benefits and then takes them away. It gives with one hand and takes away with the other and expects to get credit. That is wrong. The government should not be rewarded for that. We disagree completely with the government's approach on health care in doing that.
The government has some supportable measures in the legislation. In this budget the government has a chance to send a powerful message to the Canadian public that it understands the difficult position Canadians are in.
We had a surplus this year. It would have been a much larger surplus than it actually turned out to be because the government in its wisdom decided to go on a spending spree again. We had a spending target of $104.5 billion. The government went almost $8 billion over budget in its spending. This meant that all of a sudden there was no money left for substantive tax relief. There was no money left for substantive debt reduction. And the government continues to spend on programs that are absolutely counterproductive, programs that distort the Canadian economy, that hold us back as a country in today's global economy.
The government should go through its spending with a fine-tooth comb. Money which is being spent on low priority items should be taken away from those items and spent on things like health care, things like fixing up national defence. In many ways it has become a laughingstock, not because of the tremendous effort of the soldiers and people who make up our Canadian armed forces. They do an outstanding job but they are ill equipped. That money should have gone back into ensuring that our soldiers who are in places like Kosovo have proper equipment. Sadly that did not happen.
Our criticism goes beyond that. Canadians want tax relief. They are demanding it. They did not get it in this budget. We do not see it in Bill C-71 at all.
We know from recent events that the government, in its open moments when it assumes that no one is listening, acknowledges that Canada has a serious problem when it comes to the issue of taxation. The situation today is we are one of the highest taxed nations in the world. If Liberal members doubt my word on that, then I invite them to consider what their own industry minister said just three weeks ago when he spoke to the Empire Club. I want to read from some of the slides he put up when he spoke to the Empire Club.
The minister was addressing the issue of standard of living. He pointed out that since 1987, Canada's standard of living has increased by only 7%. In the United States it increased by 17%. According to the slide: “The income gap between the U.S. and Canada is 30% and growing, $37,239 versus $28,000”. That is a $9,000 difference in income between Canada and the U.S.
The industry minister was reading from statistics prepared by Statistics Canada. It was not the Reform Party. This was the government's industry minister levelling this kind of criticism at the performance of the Canadian economy. And guess what? For the last five years this government has been in charge of the Canadian economy. It is an admission that the government has done a horrible job.
The slide on productivity reads: “Impact of productivity. Canada has the lowest rate of growth in productivity in the G-7”. Out of all the major industrialized world, the industry minister told the Empire Club that Canada has the lowest rate of growth in productivity.
As we heard yesterday at a conference sponsored by a former Liberal cabinet minister, the pollster for the Liberals, Michael Marzolini, pointed out that productivity is tied intimately to the standard of living of Canadians. There is a direct connection between productivity and standard of living. We have the lowest rate of growth in productivity, meaning we have the lowest rate of growth in standard of living. This is the Liberal pollster at the Liberal productivity conference. And the Liberal industry minister was saying all these things. This was not the Reform Party. This was the government pointing these things out.
We go to the next slide, productivity payoff: “Our falling productivity has resulted in lower incomes, $7,000 per capita”. That is not cumulative. That is not from 1979 to 1997 if we add it all up. No. What we are talking about is that in 1997, the difference between Canada and the U.S., because we have fallen behind in our productivity, is now $7,000 per person per year. The industry minister went on to point out that it works out to $28,000 per family of four difference in income if we had kept our productivity even with the United States, but we have not.
That means the Prime Minister, the finance minister, the industry minister and the whole government are responsible for engineering an economy that has left the average family $28,000 poorer than they would have been otherwise. That is an absolutely shameful fact and the government actually spoke about it at this conference.
It is time to make some fundamental changes. In order to do that we have to begin to lower the crippling tax burden that the government levels on Canadians each and every day.
The industry minister also pointed out that we have much higher taxes in Canada than they do in the United States. Our taxes are 130% higher than taxes in the United States. Taxes in the U.S. are around 28.5% of GDP according to the industry minister. Ours are 36.8%, 130% higher.
This points to the need to make some changes in order to ensure that we have the standard of living we used to have in Canada. We used to be the economic equal of the United States. We have become second class economic citizens compared to our U.S. cousins. That is unacceptable.
The government's plan over the last five years has been to anesthetize the public and allow people to think everything is moving along the way it should be. We hear this don't worry, be happy message from the Prime Minister almost every week. I think my friends around the House would agree with that.
We know it is simply not so. We know we are falling further and further and further behind the United States. It should not happen. We are as good as they are. We are better in so many ways. We can do so many things much better than the United States.
We have companies that are world leaders, but what do we see? We see companies like Nortel, a great leader in the telecommunications industry, in the high tech field, moving more and more of its operations into the United States. That is a condemnation of the policies of the government. It is unbelievable that the government sits idly by.
No, that is not quite accurate. The government does not sit idly by. Instead it trots out these rinky-dink little programs saying, “We will have this program, we will have that program” expecting to reverse the terrible trend that is bankrupting families. Instead, the government should be cutting taxes.
There is hardly an economist left in the country who does not understand that we have become uncompetitive when it comes to taxes. The result is that our productivity continues to fall. Our standard of living continues to fall. We see that every day.
I bet there is not a member of parliament in this place who cannot tell a story about a family member, a daughter, a son, or a friend who has left Canada to go to the United States. Why do they go? There are four very compelling reasons.
First, there are more jobs in the United States especially for people with great skills in those high tech fields. Our high tech industry is held back by the government but in the United States it is booming. It is absolutely going crazy. There are all kinds of jobs. We hear stories about the entire class or a great chunk of the class from Waterloo being recruited by Microsoft to work at Microsoft in Seattle. We hear those stories all the time. There are more jobs.
Second, the pay is better. When there is an unemployment rate in the United States of 4.3%, companies in the U.S. are desperate to find good workers. They pay a lot more money. Even when comparing American dollars to Canadian dollars, companies are still paying a higher numerical value in the United States for those workers.
Third, people in the United States get to keep more of the money they earn. As the industry minister has pointed out based on the government's own data, our taxes are far higher than the taxes in the United States. The industry minister hounded that point home at the Empire Club.
Fourth, the U.S. dollar is worth so much more than ours. Ours is now at 65 cents, near a record low. People are able to buy a lot more with those dollars.
Those are four big reasons the government indirectly has given to young people to leave Canada to go to the United States. It is disgraceful that that happens. It is an economic tragedy. More than that, it is a human tragedy. We are losing our family members to places outside Canada, not only to the United States but to other countries around the world as well. Ireland is attracting many people, the U.K., and on and on it goes.
It is a human tragedy. We would like to keep our families together. We would like our young people to have the option to continue their high tech careers in Toronto, Kanata, Calgary, or wherever. We just do not see that happening because the government punishes innovation. It punishes people who have obtained skills. The result is that we lose these young people which is a great tragedy.
Lately the government has been attempting to hang its hat on a study done by KPMG Consulting which the government alleges suggests that Canada is somehow far more competitive than the rest of the world in terms of attracting business to Canada. When we look at the fine print in that KPMG study two things jump out. The first is that the single biggest reason people should come to Canada is because we have low wages. For government members to get to the point where they will stand in the House of Commons to boast about Canada having extraordinarily low wages so others should come here to set up shop speaks of the desperation of the government. It demonstrates real desperation when they get to the point of essentially saying “Come to Canada because Canadians will work for peanuts”.
Second, they say that others should come to Canada because we have an extraordinarily weak currency. The currency is the barometer of the health of the economy. We can take where the currency is and essentially say that is where the standard of living is. As the currency strengthens, so does the standard of living. We saw our currency fall to record lows in July and the government did nothing about it. In fact the Prime Minister almost bragged about it. He said “It is good for exports. No problem”. He has said that over and over again during the course of his career.
Contrarily, when the finance minister was running for the leadership of the Liberal Party several years ago he berated Michael Wilson, the Conservative finance minister at the time, because the dollar had dipped below 80 cents. We yearn for the days when it was only 80 cents. We yearn for those days because again the dollar reflects the standard of living of Canadians. When the dollar is low the standard of living is low.
If anyone doubts for a moment that Canadians have seen their standard of living drop, then do not listen to my words, listen to the words of the industry minister of the Government of Canada who pointed out in his speech to the Empire Club that Canada has seen its standard of living fall below the poorest of the deep southern American states. Canada's standard of living is below that of Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia, Arkansas and Louisiana. That is a fact.
The industry minister told the Empire Club that a few weeks ago and the government continues to stick its head in the sand a pretend everything is okay. “Don't worry, be happy”. That is all we hear from the government.
It had a chance to rectify this problem. It has been running surpluses. If it had kept the line on spending we would have money to start lowering taxes and to increase productivity and the prosperity and standard of living of Canadians.
We desperately need that in Canada today. We are tired of being second class economic citizens compared to the United State. We used to have a dollar that was stronger. We used to have a standard of living that was stronger. We used to have unemployment that was lower. That has all gone by the wayside. Since we have had this government, and Tory and Liberal governments before it, we have seen the erosion.
It is time to reverse that and there is a way to do it. The way is to hold the line on spending, run up big surpluses and cut taxes. What happens when we cut taxes? Revenues increase. Those who doubt for a moment what I am saying should look at Ontario where revenues have increased since it cut taxes. On St. Patrick's Day, look at Ireland and the Irish miracle. It cut taxes and its economy has grown at over 5% a year for several years now. It has extraordinarily low income tax rates and tax rates of all kinds, to the point where it is actually able to provide free tuition to everybody in Ireland today. That is how much extra revenue it is bringing in as a result of cutting taxes because of the increased business activity.
The government is way off track with Bill C-71. It is way off track with its budget in general. It should have taken the opportunity to start cutting taxes, to leave more money in the pockets of homemakers, business people and entrepreneurs. Those are the people who create the jobs. Those are the people who deserve a break.
I encourage my friends across the way to not be so hidebound and to consider for a moment that there might be some good ideas coming not only from the other side, not only from Canadians, but even from the Department of Industry in the comments made by the industry minister not so long ago.
At the end of the day, Canadians deserve this tax relief. We should be getting it from this government.