Mr. Speaker, the budget presented yesterday by the Minister of Finance is very disappointing. We already knew that would be the case. Last October, when the finance ministers met, this government suggested that there would be no new money for health and education. It did no more than commit to protecting projected transfers. Quebec still believes that Ottawa has enough money in its sock to offer some help.
As always, we think that the minister overestimated his spending and underestimated his revenues. He says that the surplus will amount to $11 billion for the two fiscal years covered by the budget but, according to our estimations, it will be $24 billion. We can come back to this later because we have been pretty accurate these last five years. We were off by about $4 billion for the last five years, meaning for the last five budgets presented by the minister, whereas his projections were off by $60 billion. Who is right? We can discuss it at the end of this fiscal year.
There is not one measure in this budget to get the economy back on its feet. As I said earlier, the Minister of Finance is hiding behind his inability to estimate his revenues and surplus to put this budget over on us. Once again, he is providing us with proof that he has serious credibility problems. Recently, once again, the federal surplus reached the level we had predicted, $13.6 billion. Now, he tells us he has no room to manoeuvre. Even the surplus in the EI fund was $3.7 billion, when the chief actuary had said it was $7 billion.
In our opinion, a budget was appropriate, but it ought to have been far more proactive. The real challenge to the Minister of Finance ought to have been to put together a body of measures that were more likely to bolster consumer confidence, and this he has not managed to do.
In the context of September 11, an investment in border security constitutes a strategy decision that cannot be avoided. This we admit. Yet we hardly need point out that, even before September 11, when there was no problem with air security, we were already at risk of a recession. In order to counteract the economic downturn, capital projects need to be accelerated, small and medium-size businesses in difficulty given assistance, and investment encouraged. In all, with a margin of maneuverability that is far greater than that of Quebec and the other provinces, the federal government ought to be sending out a clear message, demonstrating its leadership in reviving the economy so as to minimize job losses in the coming months.
The exercise has missed its target, and the minister has settled for presenting a budget just for the sake of form. As a number of analysts have been saying today, what we got yesterday were advertisements, rather than the budget we were entitled to. It is as if the government had bowed to the pressure, and did not want to be accused of doing nothing to deal with the recession. In fact, it was never convinced that budgetary intervention was needed. The Minister of Finance is counting on the billions of dollars invested by the Americans to stimulate our economy. As for the rest, he hopes that the drop in interest rates and the tax reductions announced last year will have the desired effect.
His lack of originality and courage can be seen in his decision to invest $2 billion in a new strategic infrastructure foundation, if, and only if, he records a surplus this year or next. It was not even included in the tables he presented yesterday. This foundation depends on there being a surplus. Instead of providing for a measure in the event of a catastrophe, the Minister of Finance is going to take money, cut the amount in half and create a foundation. We can see there is no point getting excited over this foundation just yet.
Municipalities must not count on it right away, because legislation will have to be passed in the House, and we know how long the procedures are. After a bill is tabled, it has to go to committee for study and then, after it has been examined in committee, it has to be passed by the Senate. So we will not see this foundation tomorrow.
Clearly the Liberal government is pursuing its strategy to establish a centralizing government, acting contrary to consensus. The foundation is an intrusion, further interference in areas of provincial jurisdiction. It is inconceivable that non elected officials could be given the task of negotiating directly with elected municipal officials.
It is outrageous to think that the Quebec transport minister would have to negotiate with board members of a foundation instead of his federal counterpart. Is it not the role of government to decide which roads, congress centres or water purification plants get priority?
What the public must understand is that the sole aim of these foundations is to give jobs to pals of the Prime Minister. A lovely parting gift. The public also has to know that these foundations will be funded by budget surpluses, one way of getting hold of the money left over at the end of the fiscal year.
The auditor general is critical of these foundations because they alter the government's financial data.
As we all know, since the idea of a ministry of state for urban affairs came up in the 1980s, the federal government has not been able to hide its intention to bypass the provinces and negotiate directly with the municipalities. Therefore, the objective of the infrastructure foundation is twofold: to exempt significant amounts of money from being monitored by parliamentarians, and to strengthen the federal government's authority to influence the Canadian economy.
When it created these foundations, the Liberal government explained that they would attract capital money from the private sector. This is true in the case of the Canada Foundation for Innovation, while for the others, contributions from major companies are rather rare.
At the time, we were told that these foundations were ad hoc measures, which would not be in place for more than 10 years. But the interest accumulated in these bank accounts suggests that these foundations are not going to run out of money anytime soon.
As for international humanitarian assistance, we expected Canada to show its intention to set a timeframe to reach the OECD's objective of spending 0.7% of the GDP on assistance to developing countries. We have already called for this in the House. As we all know, a $1 billion investment in international aid has a much greater impact than the same amount spent on defence.
As I have already stated in the House, in order to be effective, the fight against terrorism must involve not only military operations, but also a fight against poverty, which is a breeding ground for violence.
This lack of inspiration is also reflected in the unacceptable decision to not invest more in health services. How can the Minister of Finance tell the Canadian Press that health has without question been the number one priority of the federal government, when he is merely meeting his October 2000 commitments?
Is this the government's priority? There is nothing in the budget. There is nothing for health care and education. There is nothing for the poor. Nothing. There are no measures to fight poverty.
Health care funding is a huge challenge for provincial governments. The federal government's withdrawal from health care is unacceptable. The federal contribution has been shrinking steadily over the past 25 years. It is now only 13 cents on every dollar invested. This is what the government calls its number one priority.
Yet health care programs in Canada are not a federal but a provincial responsibility. Ottawa does not have to administer hospitals, pay nurses, negotiate with physicians, develop payment schemes or decide which services need to be funded; the provinces look after all that.
In spite of that, yesterday's budget did not contain any measure aimed at increasing health transfers to the provinces.
Since 1993, this government did not put one penny of new money into the system. Even medical specialists in Quebec blame it for problems in that province's health care system. The Fédération des médecins spécialistes du Québec supports Canada's provinces in their request for an increase in federal health transfers.
They say that there is a true fiscal imbalance in that sector. The fluctuations in federal transfers from one year to the next do not allow players in the health care system to do proper planning. Moreover, these transfers should be indexed because of increased costs related to new technologies, the aging population and escalating drug prices.
The opposition and the Bloc Quebecois are not the only ones complaining that the government is not meeting these priorities, that is increasing transfers to provinces and indexing these transfers because of increased costs related to the aging population and new technologies. So are Canadian nurses federations and the Canadian federation of physicians and health workers federations in Quebec.
By letting the provinces fend for themselves, the federal government is being very disgraceful. By refusing to pay its fair share of health care costs, the Liberal federal government becomes the greatest danger that threatens the universality of our health care system.
Now for the situation with the unemployed. Not one word about them in this budget, except for the fact that the unjustified and unexplained surplus from the employment insurance fund will be used to finance the government's current spending instead of helping those who need it.
It is unthinkable that the unemployed are paying off the Government of Canada's debt. How does the government do this? By maintaining premiums at levels that are too high, by limiting access to benefits and the length of the benefits period and by thumbing its nose at the program's objectives.
The auditor general stated in her report that the management of the fund's surplus did not respect the spirit of the Employment Insurance Act. The surplus has had a direct impact on the government's financial situation. Without it, the government would have had a surplus of $8 billion rather than $17 billion by the end of the fiscal year ending in March, 2001.
The government has not even come up with a program to help older workers who have been laid off. The re-evaluation of the federal government's position to follow up on the recommendations of the Standing Committee on Human Resources Development on employment insurance can be summed up as tens of millions of dollars for education.
In fact, the only good news on this front is the shorter waiting period for apprentices, but this government continues to pilfer from the fund.
The Minister of Finance boasts that he has kept the tax cuts already announced. The Bloc Quebecois was expecting much more. This government has not come up with any significant measure to rebalance the tax cuts in favour of low and middle income households. Again, it will be the richer members of society who benefit from the cuts, the rich friends of the members opposite.
The budget is immoral when it says nothing about the use of tax havens. Here again, the government is allowing large sums of money, which have a major impact on the Canadian tax base, to leave the country. Need we remind the government that fewer than 2% of non-residents of Canada filed a tax return last year. In addition, under the Canada-Barbados agreement, it is apparently possible to transfer capital gains totalling more than $800 million.
By contrast, what has this government announced to alleviate the housing crisis? The budget confirms a $680 million grant. This is nothing new. It has been known since the federal-provincial conference on this topic. Is it enough? Apparently not. The housing crisis continues to worsen, according to the latest CMHC report. We are experiencing an unprecedented housing shortage. The vacancy rate in Canadian cities is 1.1%, the lowest since 1987. In the riding adjoining mine, in Sherbrooke, the rate has dropped from 4.7% to 2.3% in the last year.
My Bloc Quebecois colleague, the member for Sherbrooke, could say more about this. Certainly, the federal budget brought down yesterday provides for $680 million, including $162 million for Quebec. This money will cover only 6,500 new social housing starts in partnership with municipalities.
In Montreal alone, 11,000 more units are needed. The federal government's withdrawal from social housing funding in 1994 has deprived Quebec of some 50,000 units.
This budget announces the introduction of the first new tax since the GST. This one should be called “the September 11 tax”, and it will enable the government to recover the $2.2 billion it has put into improving airport security. I should point out that any permanent resident wishing to obtain the secure identification card, which is to come into force in June, will have to pay $50 for it. On top of that, next April 1, travellers will have to pay an additional $12 each way, $24 for a round trip within Canada, to be collected when plane tickets are purchased. This will help impoverish remote regions still further.
What the public needs to keep in mind is that the government is going to move ahead with new air security measures, but above all that airline passengers will be the ones paying for them. This new tax is likely to have a very damaging effect on an industry already very hard hit by the terrorist attacks of September 11.
In this respect, Canadian measures are far from matching those announced by the U.S. government, which is giving a credit to everyone taking domestic flights. We are far from doing what representatives of ACTA, the association of Canadian travel agents, called for when they presented their brief to the Standing Committee on Finance.
This tax will apply equally to a $800 Air Canada ticket and a $150 WestJet ticket. It will be over and above all other charges travellers have to pay, such as fuel surcharges and airport improvement fees.
This government would have done well to follow the proposals that we made in our economic stabilization plan. Quebec's ideas are good: when it comes to taxes, allowing businesses to defer their corporate tax installments for six months is a measure the Bloc Quebecois asked for two months ago.
We commend this measure, just as we commend the tax credit for apprentice mechanics that we proposed and defended here in this House. The only problem: these measures are clearly insufficient without other meaningful measures to support business.
In closing, allow me to briefly recap yesterday's sad spectacle here in the House.
The Minister of Finance generously helped himself to the employment insurance fund surplus to finance newly announced measures instead of giving workers a real break on employment insurance premiums. This government could also have given employers a break on premiums. Everyone is tired of paying more than is needed to the employment insurance fund.
Environmental groups felt abandoned; meanwhile, everyone is concerned about pollution related problems. The government seems to be ignoring the fact that each year, 16,000 people die because of poor air quality. It is far from achieving what the Bloc Quebecois asked for in order to make good on the Kyoto agreement, with the exception of wind energy.
In keeping with his practice of sprinkling investments over various areas, the Minister of Finance brought down a budget as a matter of form and to please our American neighbours. It is as if his intent was to reassure the Americans, who wanted increased security for the continent.
The minister could have done a lot more for the provinces. From taxes on tobacco alone, he will take in an additional $400 million in 2002. He could have worked with the provinces to prevent their having deficits and support their initiatives to stimulate the economy quickly pending the economic recovery.
As is his wont, the Minister of Finance is considerably underestimating the budget surplus and withdrawing $13 billion from public debate.
He is not giving even a cent to health care and education and is leaving the provinces to struggle with funding for these priorities, including those of Quebecers.
As the time allotted me is going quickly, I will conclude by saying that, apart from providing investment to strengthen security measures and defence, the Minister of Finance's budget is timid. It lacks vigour and vision. It contains nothing of note for the economy. It does not even offer a cent to the middle class. It is a failure.