ADDRESS BY PRIME MINISTER JEAN CHRÉTIEN IN
A ROUNDTABLE DISCUSSION AT THE PROGRESSIVE GOVERNANCE SUMMIT
July 12, 2003
London, United Kingdom
I am delighted to be here as part of this conference on progressive
governance. I find these gatherings extremely useful. For exchanging ideas with
like-minded leaders and experts - who see government as a force for good. I have
been asked to reflect on my time as Prime Minister these past 10 years. To
reflect on what we've done and on lessons from our experience. I will touch on
four themes integral to our agenda: First, achieving fiscal sovereignty; second,
shared prosperity; third, democratic integrity; finally, good global
citizenship.
Fiscal Sovereignty
We cannot be progressive and realize the human purpose of the economy if we
lack financial means. It is not a virtue of progressives to cling to spending
that causes spiralling debt. Gaining fiscal control enables choices, and ensures
resiliency when global circumstances change. Fiscal health is the foundation for
sustained economic growth. But how we achieve it matters: it must be done
equitably, transparently and not on the backs of the poor and the marginalized.
When I took office in 1993, Canada had seen 28 straight years of budget
deficits. 37 cents of every dollar of government spending went to service
charges on debt. Our debt-to-GDP ratio was 71 percent and rising. High interest,
high inflation, and relatively high taxes were discouraging investment and
harming quality of life.
By 1997 we managed to eliminate the federal deficit. Since then we have
achieved six consecutive balanced budgets. Canada was the only G-7 country to
report a surplus last year. We have cut our debt-to-GDP ratio by a third - down
to 44 percent and falling. This was not achieved merely by economic growth - we
paid down directly over $50 billion of public debt. This has ensured that
interest rates are the lowest in 40 years. Inflation has now been low and steady
for 10 years.
We beat our deficit by reviewing all programs, scaling many back. But we
ensured actions were aligned with the priorities of Canadians. We exempted
programs for poor kids and Aboriginal Canadians. We publicly set rolling two
year targets for deficit reduction, and exceeded them every time. Equity and
transparency defined the approach and ensured public confidence and support.
Our increased fiscal room permitted the largest tax reduction in our history
- $100 billion over five years. Corporate and capital gains tax rates are now
below the U.S. When we did cut taxes, we started with relief for low and modest
income Canadians. We also made our Canada Pension Plan self-sustaining, shifting
from pay-as-you-go to full funding. It is now on a sound footing for the next 50
years.
We chose a balanced approach and used a 50/50 formula: approximately 50 per
cent of surplus revenues went to cutting taxes and paying off debt, and 50 per
cent went to investing in people. Good social outcomes we thought a better
recipe for a strong economy than more tax cuts. And indeed Canada outperformed
all G-7 countries in economic growth last year. We added a record 550,000 jobs
in 2002. But, most importantly, Canadians' real standard of living, measured in
GDP per capita, has increased by 20 per cent since 1997.
Canada is a trading nation, more so than other major economies. Growth has
slowed somewhat recently, reflecting a weaker global economy. Nonetheless, we
will remain among growth leaders in G-7 again this year. The confidence of
Canadians remains very high.
Fiscal discipline, then, pursued equitably and transparently, has given us
sovereignty, the ability to make balanced choices. Choices which saw the economy
thrive, and led Canadian businesses to invest. Provided workers with new
opportunities, and saw consumers purchasing with confidence.
Beating a deficit, paying down debt and lowering taxes are attainable goals -
and I think we found a progressive way to do it.
Shared Prosperity
Fiscal sovereignty is enabling us to share our prosperity. To empower
citizens, invest in kids, and help foster creativity and innovation in the
knowledge economy.
One of the first steps we took after beating the deficit was to establish a
National Child Benefit. This program fights poverty by ensuring low-income
parents who leave welfare and take a job keep their child benefits. Recently we
dramatically increased the program so that every Canadian child is assured the
right start.
Another major step for families has been the doubling of leave for new
parents from 26 weeks to a full year. Working with provinces we have established
a solid architecture of income support and child care services. The number of
children living in low income families in Canada has decreased by 25 percent
since 1996. And we are accelerating this rate of decrease. Active supports,
empowering families and partnerships define our approach on kids.
Strengthening our universal, publicly-funded health care system has also been
a priority. Our philosophy remains that access to health care must be based on
need, not the size of your wallet. Canadians refuse to abandon the equity,
solidarity, and efficiency of the single payer system.
Rather than scaling back medicare, our government struck a Health Accord with
provinces that expands it to cover home care and catastrophic drug costs on a
national basis. We are measuring results and reporting to the public. We are
establishing a Health Council to report on progress and recommend future
directions.
As a Third Way country, we also endorsed making the knowledge economy
accessible to citizens. Over the past few years we invested massively in
research and higher learning - over $11 billion. We created 2000 Research Chairs
at our universities to attract top talent. We dramatically increased funding for
universities across all disciplines. To support our best young minds, we created
4000 Canada Graduate Scholarships. And we made it easier for families to save
for post-secondary education through a sheltered savings plan. Our Millennium
Fund gives 100,000 scholarships per year to promote excellence and ensure
access.
Sharing prosperity for Canadians has meant the welcoming of immigrants as
citizens, to contribute to Canada, to build new lives for their families. Our
policies of multiculturalism encourage newcomers to celebrate their heritage. At
the same time they enjoy the rights of Canadians and have taken on the
responsibilities of our society. We invest in our culture and history to ensure
Canadians keep their cultural bearings. Thus, we are culturally attuned to
globalization and more likely to see its opportunities than its threats.
As a trading nation this helps create a welcoming climate for foreign
investment. A recent study by KPMG declared Canada to be the best place in the
world right now for business investment.
We have always seen the benefits of tolerance to our social harmony. We are
now appreciating how openness and diversity are creating vibrant, dynamic,
creative communities, cities that work and are culturally rich.
Vancouver, British Columbia is one such city: multicultural, buzzing with
energy, well planned. It was my pleasure to be in Prague last week when
Vancouver was awarded the honour of hosting the 2010 Winter Olympics. Canadians
will put on a great event that affirms the values of the Olympics and provides a
distinct Canadian flavour.
Investing with partners in modern infrastructure in cities and communities is
ensuring our citizens have access to top quality amenities. This includes major
efforts on water and housing for Aboriginal Canadians, and on programs for the
homeless.
Sharing prosperity broadly, not leaving people out, making strategic
investments, is ensuring our communities are good places to live, work, play and
invest. It makes people feel good and feel proud of their country to see these
things happening.
Democratic Integrity
The success of governments cannot be judged merely by the soundness of their
books and programs. More is needed. Trust in government, the sense that we are
on the side of ordinary citizens, is essential if societies are to function
well.
Declining voter participation and cynicism that we are unduly influenced by
the powerful concern us all. Too many citizens think government is unresponsive
to evolving social values. These perceptions are a problem.
In Canada we decided to tackle them head on: we just passed a Bill that
changes political financing forever. Corporations and unions can no longer
contribute to national parties. There will be a limited exemption of $1000 per
year at the local level. The private funding formerly given to parties will be
replaced by public financing. We are removing the perception that large
political donations buy influence.
We are committed to restoring pride in public service. We introduced a Bill
to allow for flexibility in recruitment and retention to ensure we attract
people who provide integrity. We are instilling a culture of transparency,
performance measurement, and results reporting across all departments.
We are adopting citizen-centred approaches to services and using new
technologies to make them easily available. We take pride in the fact that
Accenture has ranked Canada the number one country in the world in the provision
of services on-line.
I would also place under the heading of democratic integrity responsiveness
to evolving social values. Progressive governments must be forward-looking,
willing to face up to controversy rather than just hoping tough issues go away.
We introduced legislation to modernize penalties for the possession of small
amounts of marijuana. We are eliminating the possibility that young people will
have a criminal record shadowing them in their lives. Instead, we will
discourage marijuana use with fines.
Another step we are taking is to extend the principle of equality in our
Charter of Rights and Freedoms by legally recognizing the union of same sex
couples. One of only three jurisdictions in the world doing so. We will also
affirm the right of religious groups to sanctify marriage as they define it.
This was not a conscious part of our agenda. But the courts pushed the issue.
And a majority of Canadians seems ready to follow. So we decided as a government
we must respond.
Election financing, public service renewal, respect for evolving social
values, all of these we see as aspects of revitalizing faith in government. Many
commentators have called our current agenda "bold" - I see it as
responsible, responsive, and progressive.
Good Global Citizenship
Canada has always supported multi-lateral approaches to global problems. The
major challenges of our time include poverty, environmental degradation,
infectious disease, regional conflicts, organized crime, and terrorism. These
cannot be addressed by nations acting alone, however powerful. Harnessing
globalization for the betterment of people through expanded trade and smarter
development also demand coordination through multilateral organizations.
In recent years we have taken a lead role in advocating at the UN an
international agenda of collective action focussed on security of individuals
and human rights. Canadians understand that when people at risk are made safe
and secure in their own countries, we are all made more safe and secure.
We led the effort on the Ottawa Convention banning anti-personnel mines. We
also took the lead on the International Criminal Court to ensure that
perpetrators of atrocities are put on notice -- they will be held to account by
the international community. We remain deeply committed to our role in conflict
avoidance and peacekeeping.
Canada acted with firmness in the war on terrorism, participating in the
military effort in Afghanistan and committing resources to peacekeeping and
reconstruction.
We made the decision not to participate in the war in Iraq. But we have
nonetheless joined in the effort to stabilize and rebuild a functioning society
there.
Canada will double its overseas development assistance over the next number
of years. We championed the NEPAD for Africa at the G-8 meeting in Kananaskis.
We also decided to unilaterally eliminate tariffs and quotas on almost all
products from Least Developed Countries. We continue to call on others to
eliminate the agricultural subsidies and other barriers that stop poor countries
from trading their way out of poverty.
Despite vigorous opposition from parts of the Canadian business community and
the fact that we are neighbours of the US, we ratified the Kyoto Protocol We
believe that coordinated collective action is the only way to address this
environmental problem.
Our environmental obligations to the global community must also include
conserving our own wild spaces and bio-diversity. This is why at last year's
World Summit on Sustainable Development, we committed to conserving vast new
territories, creating 10 new parks and five new marine conservation areas. We
essentially completed our national park system.
Consistent with our belief in human security and in response to the
collective failures in Somalia, Rwanda, and Srebrenica, Canada established in
September 2000 the International Commission on Intervention and State
Sovereignty at the UN Millennium Summit in New York. The time has come to
reflect seriously on the Commission's proposal to redefine sovereignty as
"the responsibility to protect". We also must to reflect on the way
forward. For the United Nations community has to develop a coherent approach to
cases where states are unable or unwilling to protect their citizens from brutal
harm. Canada is prepared to do its part to move this debate forward.
I have always believed that good global citizenship is essential to serving
the interests of one's own citizens. But it is also an expression of our
idealism and common concern for humanity.
Conclusion
This, then, represents a Canadian recipe for progressive governance over the
past decade, Canada's version of "the Third Way": fiscal sovereignty;
shared prosperity; democratic integrity; and good global citizenship. I like to
call it "the Canadian Way". While historians may end up viewing it
differently, I think it has been working. Thank you.
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