Mr. Speaker, first, I would like to compliment the hon. member opposite as being by far the most effective spokesperson for his party on economic affairs, which is not saying all that much, but it does make one wonder why he is sitting at the back rather than the front.
In my very brief time, I would just like to point out three errors he has made. First, he says we are planning deficit, when we are not. Second, he says we have done nothing to stimulate the economy, when we have. Third, we have adjusted the living standard issue.
On the first point, the contingency reserve is there for contingencies. I would challenge the him to think of anything that is more of an unexpected, uncontrollable contingency than the events of September 11 and its aftermath. We have eaten partly into the contingency reserve to deal with this mother of all contingencies. On that basis, we have absolutely no planning deficit.
On the second point, he said there was no stimulus. This very year we have $17 billion in tax cuts. We have $3 billion in health care spending. We have other things adding up to more than $20 billion, which is far more, relative to the size of the economy, than any stimulus that the United States has even contemplated, let alone done.
On Cape Breton, we have a $112 million fund to help the workers and give hope to that part of the country.
Finally, on living standards, productivity is key, and on productivity we have slashed the corporate tax rate. We have eliminated the income tax surtax. We have cut the capital gains rate to half. We have put money into R and D, and all of that supports productivity and living standards.