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Results: 1 - 15 of 43
View Scott Duvall Profile
NDP (ON)
Thank you.
One of the things that Mr. Yussuff said—and I feel it's outrageous that this could actually happen—is that when Sears paid $500 million to dividends in 2013, they still had a $313-million pension deficit. How can we prevent companies from doing this in the future? They're the ones that plan going into CCAA. How do we stop this paying of dividends when there is a huge debt in the pension fund?
Maybe Mr. Lemieux wants to answer.
View Ted Falk Profile
CPC (MB)
View Ted Falk Profile
2021-05-17 13:27
Thanks, Mr. Chair.
That is a lot of money, but it's over 38 years, so I appreciate that.
Has the calculation been done on that amount of money to find out whether it is actually fair compensation for royalties related to the oil and gas sector?
View Wayne Easter Profile
Lib. (PE)
Thank you all.
We'll move on to part 1(t), “extending the income tax deferral available for certain patronage dividends paid in shares by an agricultural cooperative corporation to payments made before 2026”.
On that one, I forget the explanation from the other night. Can somebody give me a little bit of an explanation? What's the intent here?
View Peter Julian Profile
NDP (BC)
Thank you very much, Madam Freeland. Yes, I want to get back to other questions. I'm taking your answers as “no”, for the moment, on both.
On the wage subsidy, it is very controversial. Billions of dollars have been misused for dividends, stock buybacks and massive executive bonuses. The government has acknowledged that by kind of putting in place something for June 5 that doesn't include dividends and doesn't include stock buybacks, and yet the government has been saying all along that money should not be used for dividends, stock buybacks and executive bonuses, that the money should go to the workers.
My question is very simple and twofold. First off, will the government insist that a company that has laid off its workers and paid dividends and executive bonuses pay the money back?
Second, we wrote to you on January 5 asking for the full list of amounts that companies have received under the wage subsidy. Will you release those amounts so that Canadians can actually judge for themselves how the wage subsidy has been distributed?
View Andrew Scheer Profile
CPC (SK)
This year, on March 31, Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation, CMHC, announced a special dividend payment of $3.5 billion to the Government of Canada; that is, a transfer from CMHC directly to the Government of Canada. This means the premiums of those first-time homebuyers, who are low- and middle-income Canadians who can't afford to put more than 20% down on their mortgage, went to pay a $3.5-billion dividend to the government. Is that correct?
View Andrew Scheer Profile
CPC (SK)
It says here on CMHC's website that that quarterly dividend is $250 million, so that's exactly a billion dollars a year if it's $250 million a quarter. That's off the backs of premium payers. That special dividend that goes into the government's coffers is directly on the backs of low- and middle-income Canadians and, as you just mentioned, first-time homebuyers. The federal government has scooped up the profits made on the backs of hard-working first-time homebuyers. Is that correct?
View Matthew Green Profile
NDP (ON)
In testimony, we heard that there was information, and that CRA had at its disposal tools to monitor the reasonableness of applications as they relate to the wage subsidy. In an Order Paper question, I asked about the CRA's decision to temporarily suspend, as of March 2020, the programs and services for high-risk audits, including international large businesses, high net-worth compliance, GST of large businesses and so on.
In other committees, you've heard me, Ms. Hogan, reference the $120 million of subsidies that Imperial Oil took, and the $300-plus million it paid out in dividends. I've tried to find a rationale to that, and I have had some challenges.
In ESDC's policy development and program design, is it your opinion that it adequately had analysis around the inevitability of companies taking the wage subsidy and paying it out in dividends?
View Kelly McCauley Profile
CPC (AB)
I recognize that, but you mentioned they did an analysis regarding.... I think Mr. Green was referring to payouts for dividends, etc., companies receiving subsidies but still paying out dividends. You mentioned that finance did an analysis to come up with the wage subsidy or recommendations for it.
Are you aware if ESDC followed such recommendations, or did they just create it out of the blue without the feedback from finance?
View Matthew Green Profile
NDP (ON)
Thank you.
I deeply appreciate the interventions of my friend Maxime from the Bloc, which laid out all the information that was withheld and the secrecy in the way this analysis was made. I'll go back just to reiterate for the people who are tuning in.
You have stated in paragraph 7.8 that the Department of Finance performed a partial analysis of the initial design of the subsidy program, but then you said it later provided a sound and complete analysis to inform the adjustments to the subsidy. We heard Mr. Sabia talk about the rapid way in which they had to respond, yet you've laid out that you were unable to provide Parliament with details of these analyses because they were in secret, and cabinet documents must be kept in strict confidence.
The challenge that we have before us as a committee undertaking this audit is that we have to have, I think, reasonable access to information to know exactly what it is that is before us.
I'm going to frame just a little bit further that in paragraph 7.9 you stated through the Auditor General that there were prepayment controls that were implemented to ensure that payments were appropriate. You used an example that the agency did not have up-to-date earnings or tax data or sub-annual data or any kind of starting points throughout the year and that you did not have all the information you needed to validate the reasonableness of the applications before payments were issued.
I'm going to put this question through you, Madam Chair, to the Department of Finance, to Mr. Sabia, whom I missed in the last session of our audit on the CERB. I brought up some important questions in relation to the push-and-pull economics of what we were providing to people to stay home safely versus what the labour market demanded.
Did your department have discussions about mandating that any businesses receiving the wage subsidy would not be allowed to engage in stock buybacks, pay dividends or pay CEO wage bonuses?
I'm not asking you to reveal any kind of secret cabinet stuff. I just want to know if you had discussions about that in your analysis. You don't even have to give me the results. I just want to know, Mr. Sabia, whether you considered it.
View Matthew Green Profile
NDP (ON)
Through you, Madam Chair, sir, those are talking points. I need to know whether you had discussions about stock buybacks, dividends and CEO bonuses. If so, did you make a recommendation to cabinet? You don't have to tell me what the recommendation was, but I need to give you an example. This program provided $120 million in public money to Imperial Oil and then let them pay out $324 million in dividends to their rich shareholders. I need to know, in terms of your reasonableness for the applications, whether you provided cabinet with recommendations on the dividends and the bonuses.
View Matthew Green Profile
NDP (ON)
Through you, Madam Chair, how do you use the terms “robust” and “open”? We're in the public accounts committee dealing with an audit and we don't have basic information on the analysis by the government on how this came to be.
I'll give you an example. We're talking about Main Street versus Bay Street here. I have a whole community of businesses on Locke Street in my community whose 2019 revenues were dramatically reduced, and due to all these infrastructure programs they can't adequately show their losses and they didn't qualify for anything. One in five businesses in my city are not renewing their business licence. That is the reality and the of the small businesses that are trying to weather this storm.
I need to know whether the Department of Finance had, in its analysis, any thought around the way in which the major corporations of this country absolutely, in my opinion, bilked taxpayers on this program.
View Matthew Green Profile
NDP (ON)
Once again, was a recommendation made that included an analysis in keeping with.... You don't have to tell me what the recommendation was, but did your department at least consider that corporations like Imperial Oil could take $120 million and pay out $300 million-plus dollars in dividends?
View Brad Vis Profile
CPC (BC)
That would be very helpful because I found it odd, given how much we know indigenous people don't have adequate housing, that CMHC paid dividends to the federal government.
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