:
I call this meeting to order.
Welcome to meeting No. 53 of the House of Commons Standing Committee on Agriculture and Agri-Food.
I will start with a few reminders.
Today's meeting is taking place in a hybrid format. The proceedings will be made available via the House of Commons website. Just so you are aware, the webcast will always show the person speaking, rather than the entirety of the committee. Screenshots or taking photos of your screen is not permitted.
Pursuant to Standing Order 108(2) and the motion adopted by the committee on Wednesday, October 5, 2022, the committee is resuming its study of food price inflation.
I would now like to welcome our witnesses for this first one‑hour panel.
[English]
Today we welcome three different witnesses. We are having issues with our representatives from the Assembly of First Nations, but we're very fortunate to have in the room, from the Daily Bread Food Bank, Neil Hetherington, chief executive officer.
Mr. Hetherington, welcome to the committee.
From Second Harvest Canada, we have someone who has appeared before this committee and is no stranger to our work, Ms. Lori Nikkel, chief executive officer.
Welcome back to the committee. We look forward to hearing from you here today.
Colleagues, if we are able to get our friends from the Assembly of First Nations online, we'll grant them five minutes, but I want to get started with those who are in the room.
I'm going to start with Mr. Hetherington.
We'll go over to you, and you have up to five minutes.
My name is Neil Hetherington, and I have the awesome privilege of being the CEO of the Daily Bread Food Bank, Canada's largest food bank, based in Toronto, with a mission that everybody's right to food is one day realized.
I'm here to talk about three points, to let you know what we are seeing on the ground in the food bank sector, to provide you with some recommendations for consideration and to give you an invitation for you to ensure that everybody's right to food is realized.
On the first point, what we are seeing is unprecedented. There are 5.8 million Canadians who are food insecure. In Toronto, with the food banks that Daily Bread serves, we used to see about 65,000 clients per month. With the pandemic, that number rose to 120,000, and between January 2021 and today, we are now seeing 270,000 client visits per month. That's from 65,000 to 270,000 clients per month. If there's nothing else that you take from my testimony today, I hope you take that startling, horrific number away.
The fact is that we are seeing client growth at a remarkable rate. Previous to the pandemic, we saw about 400 or so new clients per month. That number during the pandemic rose to just under 2,000 per month, and last month we saw 12,400 new clients, people who had never used a food bank before, coming to the Daily Bread Food Bank for the first time.
You've heard testimony from economists and from food producers, suppliers and retailers, each of whom have provided their opinion as to what's driving the unprecedented food inflation that we all feel, so I won't speak to those complex factors. What I will speak to is the impact of food inflation that is being felt at the community level. We continue to see large proportions of clients who have fixed incomes coming to food banks, but what's new is that we are now seeing individuals who are working full time having to make use of food banks. In fact, that number has risen to about one-third of food bank clients having full-time employment. That number doubled over the past year, so if you have a job, that doesn't guarantee that you are not going to need a food bank.
We've started to look at the correlations between food bank usage and various economic indicators. We've looked at employment, and we've looked at market rents, and the direct correlation between food bank usage and inflation is the only real correlation we have seen that can account for this unprecedented growth. Make no mistake, food inflation at 11.6% and CPI north of 6% is having a marked direct, deep impact on food insecurity in Canada.
As important as it is to examine what is producing the rapid increase in food prices, we also need to ask what led us to this situation, a situation where the lack of an extra $30 to $50 per person per month is causing individuals to have to rely on food charity. We need to start with how we got here.
While the rate of poverty in Canada has declined over the past number of years, some two million Canadians remain in deep poverty. That means that their income falls below 75% of the official poverty line. What does that mean on the ground? In Toronto it means, if you are coming to a food bank, that on average you have $8.01 left over per day after paying for your rent and utilities. That's eight dollars, and one in five food bank users in Toronto have nothing. They have used all of their income on rent and utilities, and they have to rely completely on charity, family and friends to be able to make up the difference.
There is hope, and there's hope in these recommendations that I have before you. We're pleased to see the movement of Bill , with the Canada disability benefit unanimously passed in the House and with the Senate right now. That will have a dramatic effect for so many Canadians.
We're grateful for a number of income programs, such as the Canada child benefit, old age security and the guaranteed income supplement, all of these being indexed to inflation. Those are positive, but we need to recognize that there's a significant gap that remains in our social safety net. The biggest gap is among working-age, single individuals, who represent close to half of food bank clients and half of those living in deep poverty in Canada. These individuals have very few income supports available to them beyond social assistance, and, to be clear, social assistance, at least in Ontario, is about one-third the level of the poverty line in the province.
If we want to protect Canadians from the impacts of inflation, then we need to address the financial precarity that is the reality of so many households. It's time to close the gap for single, individual adults in our social safety net, just as we've done for children and for seniors.
We recommend transforming the Canada workers benefit into a Canada working age supplement that has a lower eligibility threshold and a higher maximum benefit level, and indexing it and all future income supports to inflation.
We recognize that with rampant inflation the government will be cautious on spending and stimulating the economy, but we are proposing a measure to support those in deepest poverty.
The Daily Bread Food Bank and food banks across the country are already at a breaking point. We are bracing for another rise in food bank visits. In fact, this past April, Statistics Canada indicated that one in five Canadians said that they are going to have to rely on community, on food charities, on family and on friends to be able to get by.
Charities can't meet this need. We need all levels of government to come together to act to ensure that Canadians can afford to put food on their tables.
We said we were going to build back better—
:
Thank you, Chair and committee members, for the opportunity to appear before you and discuss the critical issue of food security and the impacts that rising food costs are having on Canadians.
First, I'd like to say that I agree one hundred per cent with everything Mr. Hetherington just said.
As you may remember from my last appearance before this committee, Second Harvest is Canada's largest food rescue organization. We are a global thought leader on perishable food redistribution. We strive to grow an efficient food recovery network to fuel people and reduce the environmental impact of avoidable food waste.
That mission is all the more important during difficult and uncertain economic periods. As we all know, we are in the middle of one of those periods. The food sector is facing unprecedented adversity.
Rising costs—the reason we're here today—labour shortages and climate change have been a considerable burden for producers and businesses across the supply chain. Solving these challenges has proved to be very complicated. Even though food companies are innovating, investing in new technologies and trying to find efficiencies, addressing these issues will not be easy or happen quickly.
In the meantime, the Canadian public is bearing the brunt of the challenging economic landscape.
As inflationary pressures lead to higher grocery prices, the use of food charities in Canada has increased significantly, and support for Canadians is expected to continue rising in 2023 by an additional 60%, based on a recent poll done by Second Harvest. These organizations, of which there are 61,000, are triaging an affordability crisis affecting households nationwide. Every day, Canadians are forced to choose between healthy nutritious food and other essentials like housing, heating, water and transportation. Food is a discretionary cost, so not only is the price of food making it prohibitive to purchase enough groceries; it's forcing Canadians to buy the least nutritional and most overly processed foods, because that's what they can afford, if they can afford it at all.
As everyone here knows, poor nutrition is linked to many negative health outcomes, including heart disease, stroke, some cancers and type 2 diabetes, not to mention food insecurity's impact on mental health and cognitive behaviour. In children, poor nutrition results in lower educational outcomes and problems with physical, emotional and psychological development that will live with them throughout their lives. Not only are rising food costs pushing more Canadians into food insecurity in the short term, but the impact of being unable to access healthy foods will last far longer than the inflationary pressure we face today. While long-term solutions are sorely needed, in the meantime we must act now to ensure Canadians have access to the nutrients they need to live a healthy life.
I cannot stress enough the desperation that is being felt by Canadians across this country as people are simply trying to survive and don’t have the means to make ends meet. As Neil said, for many of them it is for the first time ever. These are people with full-time jobs.
This committee faces a very difficult question: How can our government fix this?
In addition to the recommendations I made in October to bring back the emergency food security fund and the surplus food rescue program, I recommend that this committee investigate the impact that eliminating best-before dates would have on Canadians. Best-before dates are wildly misunderstood. They are not expiry dates. They refer to a product’s peak freshness. While Canadians struggle to put food on the table, they are also convinced that best-before dates are about safety and will throw away perfectly good food to protect themselves and their families. Eliminating best-before dates would prevent safe, consumable food from being thrown out and save Canadians money on their grocery bills.
While the issues of food affordability and growing food insecurity are complex and require long-term solutions to resolve, there is more that we can do right now to ensure millions of vulnerable Canadians are not going hungry. Currently, for every one grocery store there are four non-profits feeding Canadians and filling legislative gaps. I ask all committee members for their efforts and support to address this crisis head-on.
Thank you.
:
Thank you very much, Ms. Nikkel.
I'm told that we have Chief Louis online.
Chief, if you're there and you can turn on your camera on, we can turn the mike over to you.
If you can hear me, Chief Louis, the floor is yours. You have up to five minutes. We might have to do a slight microphone test.
Maybe that's already been done, Madam Clerk.
I'm going to turn the floor over to you, Chief Louis, and we'll start from there.
You're on mute, sir. Down at the bottom of your screen, in the left corner, there might be a mute button that you can click to unmute.
Okay, we can hear you in the room. We're going to do our best for our translators, and if there are issues, Mr. Louis, I'll intervene. Why don't you go ahead?
:
My name is Byron Louis. I'm the chief of the Okanagan Indian Band. It's an honour to be here today to share on the perspectives of the Assembly of First Nations concerning food price inflation and its devastating impacts on first nations.
Given the short time for opening remarks, I will focus my remarks on three areas: the historic context of first nations food security and insecurity in Canada, the impacts of food price inflation on first nations, and our recommendations.
I'll start with the history of first nations. We have historically experienced systemic discrimination and colonialism, which have contributed to food insecurity, lost culture and the infringement of our rights. If you look at the recent Yale decision that came out of Northeastern B.C., it's specific to cumulative effects on 97% of their traditional territories, so you can imagine what the impact of that is on such things as what are defined as our country foods.
As first nations, we have a unique and sacred reciprocal relationship with mother earth and all living things. As such, environmental stewardship is central to our cultures, traditions, health and food sovereignty. However, environmental degradation and settler colonial policies continue to damage our environment and erode our food sovereignty.
First nations in Canada are experiencing extremely high rates of food insecurity, with many first nations households finding it difficult to put enough food on the table. Recent studies found that first nations experience disproportionately high rates of food insecurity, about three to five times higher than the Canadian population overall. Families with children are even more affected.
Over the last century, first nations have experienced a profound nutritional transition, from traditional food to an increased reliance on market food systems and a resulting heightened food insecurity.
Throughout the pandemic, first nations have been returning to traditional modes of hunting, fishing and trapping, only to compete with more licensed hunters than even before and fewer populations of fish and wildlife. We are witnessing in our lifetime the disappearance of salmon in the Yukon and the unimaginable poverty that's taking over, which impacts the full scope of the ecosystem. First nations see this as a crisis of food security, as wild country foods that were once plentiful no longer exist, and store-bought foods that first nations cannot afford take their place.
In British Columbia, here, if you look at some of the statistics on chinook salmon, about 13 out of the 14 chinook stocks are in peril and requiring some type of listing, and that is a major part of our diets on the west coast.
If you look at the impacts of food price inflation on first nations' food security and sovereignty, the cost of food in Canada rose by 10.4% in January 2023, the highest rise since about 1980.
If you take into consideration any northern community, you're talking about the ability.... If you're able to haul goods and services over an ice bridge it's about 60 cents a pound, but if you have to fly them in it's $60 a pound, so you can imagine the effect that has on anyone's buying power.
According to the consumer price index from Statistics Canada, grocery prices are up 9%. However, first nations communities face even higher food prices, up to 2.5 times higher than the national average, putting food beyond the reach of many first nations families. In my own experience of being up in Old Crow, which is the highest community in the Yukon, a small piece of coho salmon about this big and that looked like about a single serving was $26 for that piece. If you have a family of five, do the math. That's well over $100 just for that one family to put that on the table for food. If you're on a fixed income, think of what that causes and the actual price of hauling it in.
When you look at food prices, inflation poses unique and significant impacts on first nations, who are already facing challenges related to food insecurity and access to healthy food. The average wage of a first nations family is $22,000 per year, which is defined as the poverty line in Canada.
In the past, we were able to live or subsist on this because we had access to our traditional foods. That does not exist anymore.
As first nations, traditional foods remain essential to our food systems. Food price inflation makes it more expensive for first nations to practice hunting and fishing, creating additional barriers to traditional foods.
I appreciate all the witnesses for being here.
I'm remote. I'm in Kitchener—Conestoga right now, which is the traditional territory of the Anishinabe, Haudenosaunee and Neutral people. While I have a chance to talk to you, Chief Louis, I hope I can expand on what you were saying.
You were talking about the price of healthy foods and how it's actually much higher in first nations communities than in the rest of Canada. You talked about food transportation costs, climate change compounding the issues the further north you get, and the higher rates of poverty and unemployment making it even harder to eat healthy food. You talked about the costs and the challenges that would lead to more food insecurity and then diet-related health issues.
We are hearing some stories of innovative ways.... We're trying to figure out a way to help locally, as opposed to bringing food in. There are some success stories of innovative ways to grow vegetables year round even if temperatures are below freezing.
Do you have any instances of indigenous communities partnering with organizations or companies to develop things like hydroponic container gardens, greenhouses or vertical farming?
:
That's being done in certain communities across Canada. It's in certain locations, but it's not the norm.
When you're talking about such things as greenhouses, technologies and others, there are certain requirements that would be affected by that. If you're dependent on diesel generation, then there are certain limitations on that or on the technology itself.
With that being said, a lot of communities are actually instituting what are now community gardens. Even myself, growing up as a young kid, our country foods actually supported us quite extensively, and so did gardens. It's slowly starting to return to that. If you look at that, it's probably about 30 years since those were the norm. Now it's slowly trying to go back there. It's going to take a while.
Keep in mind that we have global warming, which is probably going to exist for anywhere from 50 to 100 years.
:
Are you referring to the impact of the rescued food?
We know that when we keep it in landfills, it creates methane gas, because there's no oxygen in landfills. Most of our food ends up in landfills. We know that when we keep it out, we are not emitting that methane gas.
Economically, it's free. It's all free. There's so much food in Canada that we don't have to purchase it. We get it for free. That allows those charities and non-profits, of which there are 61,000, to use their money for what they need, which is wraparound services. If they need a mental health worker, if they need a social worker, if they need sports.... Whatever they need, they don't have to spend their money on food. That's the economic driver.
The social driver is that they are wraparound services. We support food banks, but we're an opt-in organization. We support any charity or non-profit that supplies food to people in need. There is no stigma. I mean, it depends on where you're going. Whether they are schools, community centres, churches or mosques, the goal is to give them something that isn't just food. That's a social network for them. It's amazing what happens when people get together socially, for a number of reasons. They typically get this wonderful thing called confidence and some life skills.
I'm sorry, Kody; I will shut my mouth right now.
:
Thank you very much, Mr. Chair, and thank you to all of our witnesses for joining our committee today and for helping us study this very important topic.
Mr. Hetherington, I'd like to start with you.
The figures you've presented to our committee we are all somewhat familiar with, but to hear you repeat them in such a concise and ordered way is a very damning indictment of the state of our country and what too many Canadians are going through on a day-to-day basis.
I was especially struck by the figures you relayed to us that showed the increase in the number of Canadians who have full-time employment but who are relying on food banks to make it through month by month. If there is a more damning indictment of the state of our economy than the fact that someone is working full time and trying their best to make as much income as they can but they're still reliant on food banks, I don't know what it is. When you compare that with some of the profits that are being felt in some segments, that's quite a damning indictment.
You mentioned several times during your opening statement the concept of a right to food. In Canada of course we have our rights enshrined in the charter. One of my colleagues is attempting to bring legislation to the House on enshrining a right to a healthy environment. When you talk about a right to food, you've given some examples in terms of policy and through income supports about how we could support people, but do you ever see this right to food being enshrined in legislation? Has that ever been something you've discussed? Could you expand on that topic a bit?
:
Thank you for that. I appreciate the addition you provided to this committee.
Ms. Nikkel, I'd like to turn to you and Second Harvest Canada.
Welcome back to our committee. We've always valued your testimony before this body.
In your opening statement, you talked about how, because of the high price of food, families are increasingly turning to cheaper items at the supermarket—to more heavily processed foods that are not as high in nutritional value as, say, the foods around the outside edges of supermarkets, where your fresh fruits and vegetables, dairy and meats are. They are instead going to processed foods. I think it's very important that you add a bit more than what your opening statement allowed for.
What are the long-term consequences of that lower nutritional uptake by families? What does that do to the developing child's brain, for instance?
We need to understand this, as a committee. There will be longer-term impacts from this on our health care system...not only personally and socially but also economically, in terms of the number of health care dollars we may have to spend as a result of not tackling this initially.
:
Thank you, Mr. Chair, and thank you to the witnesses for their good work.
I'm fortunate enough to live in the 42nd parallel, with a lot of greenhouses. I have access to fresh fruits and vegetables virtually year-round, summer root crops, etc.
I'm going to start with Mr. Louis.
Members in our community have partnered with a first nation—the Prince Albert Grand Council—and have experimented with and shipped fresh fruits and vegetables, to the gratitude of that band.
Can you speak to the access, in general, that first nations communities have? The fresh fruits and vegetables tend not to be as dense a product, when you're talking about six-dollar freight. Can you talk about the impact of nutritious food and first nations?
Chief Louis, I'd like to continue with you.
I was on the public safety committee a couple of weeks ago, and we heard from a witness representing the Nunavut Association of Municipalities. He was also talking about how hunting was used to really shield a lot of families from the high prices of food, and about that connection to the land. They were talking about the danger that certain elements of Bill posed to their hunting rifles, which they depend on.
I'm proud to represent a riding out here on Vancouver Island that sits on the traditional territories of many Coast Salish first nations, part of the Nuu-chah-nulth first nation, and the Pacheedaht and Ditidaht first nations.
I guess my final question to you in the time I have left is this. You know, we have a diet here that is very much based on what the ocean provides. If you could just talk about the access to processing capacity.... What can the federal government do more to ensure that first nations have access to those traditional foods, to help them process them and to maybe tackle the problem that many communities are experiencing with these high food prices?
:
We're going to get started with our second panel.
Thank you for your patience in letting us get transitioned and make sure our technical team is all set for our translators.
We have three individuals appearing today on the second panel.
By video screen we have Ian Lee, who is associate professor at the Sprott School of Business at Carleton University.
Welcome, Mr. Lee.
From the Agricultural Producers Association of Saskatchewan, we have the president, Ian Boxall.
It's great to see you, Mr. Boxall. We had the chance to interact with you just a week or two ago with the CFA meetings. It's great to have you before our committee.
From the Canadian Taxpayers Federation, we have Franco Terrazzano, who is the federal director. He is appearing here in person.
I'm going to move forward with five-minute opening remarks. I'm going to start with Mr. Lee for up to five minutes.
Sir, the time and floor are yours.
Thank you, Mr. Chair and committee members, for this invitation today to discuss the views of farmers on food inflation.
As you mentioned, my name is Ian Boxall. I'm the president of the Agricultural Producers Association of Saskatchewan, which represents around 15,000 farm and ranch families. I'm also a farmer from the community of Tisdale, in northeast Saskatchewan.
I want to focus my comments today, first, on inflationary factors affecting our industry, and second, on the importance of a grocery store code of conduct to promote certainty and transparency throughout the food supply chain.
As committee members know, Saskatchewan farmers do not set the price of our products, or the price for the inputs we buy to grow them. We are impacted by inflation on both ends, when we purchase our farm inputs, and when we purchase food, yet the causes of inflation are many: geopolitical issues, weather-related events, the pandemic and inefficiencies in our system.
On food price inflation, farmers are very sensitive to the current environment affecting consumers. We are at the forefront of food production, and it is often easy to point to the price of the commodities we produce as the cause of what is happening at the grocery store.
This is why APAS is undertaking work to highlight a farmer's share of the food dollar. We want to help educate the public and build a better understanding of the impacts farmers have on the price consumers see today. I anticipate this to be negligible, given the rapid rise in food prices. We plan to have this work completed in April.
We also support the importance of a Canadian grocery code of conduct to improve efficiencies, collaboration and transparency throughout the supply chain. The code will help ensure that processors, wholesalers and large and small retailers play by the same rules, adhere to standards and ensure fair transactions throughout the value chain.
In 2021 Saskatchewan farmers experienced their most expensive crop ever for livestock and grain production, spending $11.5 billion on farm expenses. That's 11% higher than 2020. The year 2022 wasn't any better. Saskatchewan farmers are concerned about the lack of price transparency and supply, and about certainty for critical farm inputs, such as fertilizer, fuel, seed and chemicals.
The cost of production inflation creates added risks for producers. In 2021, Saskatchewan farmers spent $2.67 billion on fertilizer purchases alone, which made up 24% of cash operating expenses, exceeding the previous year's fertilizer purchases by 30%. Since 2019, glyphosate has increased 62%, fuel is up 52%, the price for urea has increased 112% since May 2019, and anhydrous ammonia is up 113%.
These inputs are critical for food production and security at a time when the world needs Canadian agricultural products. We know that inflation and the cost of living are a major concern right now for everyone. At the same time, costs are especially volatile for essential farm inputs, which make up a huge portion of farm costs. A lack of transparency on what's causing price spikes is very concerning and requires further investigation.
I'd like to close out my remarks by making these observations for your consideration.
First, food production and security should always be of the utmost importance in policy development. No policy should limit, restrict or reduce food production, or decrease food security.
Second, it is important to support and recognize innovation. Farmers have adopted or produced some of the most innovative technologies, which have positively contributed to food production while increasing the biodiversity of the land and reducing our carbon footprint. We will continue to do so.
Third, efficiency, accountability and transparency of transportation systems, to help limit supply chain restrictions so that agriculture products reach their destinations, are critical to reducing inflationary costs.
Fourth, a grocery store code of conduct can be a useful policy instrument to achieve better collaboration and efficiencies to help address food costs.
We feel these measures will help reduce supply chain friction and improve dynamics.
Finally, Saskatchewan farmers are encouraged by the progress of Bill to exempt natural gas and propane for on-farm use. This bill will help reduce costs that farmers should not have to bear and cannot pass along.
With that, I will stop there.
Thank you, Mr. Chair, for this opportunity. I look forward to the discussion.
:
When you increase costs for farmers, Canadians pay more for groceries. When you increase costs for truckers, Canadians pay more for groceries.
I'm Franco Terrazzano. I'm with the Canadian Taxpayers Federation. I'm here on behalf of 235,000 Canadian taxpayers who want you to stop hiking the taxes that make it more expensive for farmers to make our food, for truckers to deliver our food and for families to buy that food.
There's an easy and quick way for the government to make food more affordable—stop hiking taxes—but in less than two weeks the government will raise the carbon tax for the fourth time since the beginning of the pandemic.
The carbon tax will increase the price of gas by 14 cents per litre and the price of diesel by 17 cents per litre.
Everything that gets delivered by truck will become more expensive, including your favourite kale salad.
After the tax hike, federal carbon, fuel and sales taxes will cost about 29 cents per litre of diesel. That means the big rig truck driver who delivers food to the store will pay about $260 in federal taxes every fuel up.
Farmers say that the carbon tax cost them about $14,000 on average in 2019, according to the CFIB. A higher carbon tax means it's more expensive for farmers to dry grain, and it means higher prices at the store.
The carbon tax on propane and natural gas will cost farmers $1 billion through 2030. That is according to the Parliamentary Budget Officer.
I will now read you a quote from Jeff Barlow, an Ontario corn, wheat and soybean farmer: “My competitors to the south of me in the United States do not pay that [carbon] tax, so now my cost goes up and I have no alternative. By penalizing me, there's nothing else that I can do but just be penalized.”
Less than a quarter of countries have a national carbon tax. That's according to the World Bank. Ottawa hiked taxes while many of our peers and competitors cut taxes during the pandemic. There are 51 other national governments that cut taxes. That includes more than half of the G7 and G20 countries, and it includes two-thirds of OECD countries.
Australia, New Zealand, the Netherlands, Germany, South Korea, the United Kingdom, Italy, Israel, India and Portugal are among those countries that cut fuel taxes. Ottawa is getting ready to impose a second carbon tax through fuel regulations this summer.
British Columbia currently has a second carbon tax. It costs about 16 cents per litre of gas and 19 cents per litre of diesel. There are no rebates with the second carbon tax.
The more you tax, the less money Canadians have to afford higher-cost groceries. If you think you can raise taxes, skim some off the top and still make people better off with rebates, then I have some ocean-view property in Regina to sell you.
The carbon tax will cost the average family between $402 and $847 this year, even after the rebates. That's according to the PBO. That could be a couple weeks of groceries for a family of four, but it's being taxed away.
Lower and middle-income Canadians and households currently experiencing energy poverty, such as single mothers and seniors living on fixed income, will feel the most pain from the second carbon tax. That's according to the government's own analysis.
The higher carbon taxes are layered on top of higher payroll and higher alcohol taxes. According to a recent Leger poll, 74% of Canadians say families pay too much tax.
Fortunately, you can provide relief for your constituents. You can help make life and groceries more affordable. At the very least, you must stop hiking taxes.
Thank you.
I'm hoping that at the end if there are a couple of minutes to spare, we can ask some other questions to Mr. Lee, if possible.
Thanks to our witnesses. I appreciate Mr. Terrazzano's bringing up The Last Saskatchewan Pirate, because there probably is a “Jolly Roger on Regina's mighty shores”.
I'm going to start with Mr. Boxall.
You mentioned that Saskatchewan had its most expensive harvest in history, at $11.5 billion, which was 11% higher than previous years.
Mr. Terrazzano mentioned this, and we have it in some information from Mr. Lee, that diesel fuel is up 76.5%, and input costs for farmers are up 65.1%. This is all from Stats Canada. The carbon tax is going up again on April 1.
What kind of impact is the carbon tax having on Canadian farmers and your ability to remain financially sustainable?
I already provided my disclosures about not consulting, not being partisan and not belonging to any political party. I'll cut right to the chase.
I've taught the strategy course for the past 35 years at Carleton, where we analyze individual companies using the audited financial statements, looking at things like gross profit margin, net profit margin, ROIC, inventory turnover and so forth. In that time, teaching it five times a year over 35 years, I've estimated that my students and I have looked at 3,000 to 4,000 corporations, or 10 to 15 per course.
Why I'm telling you about this is that we look at trend data. We've also looked at Loblaws, Metro and Sobeys. Moreover, inter-industry comparisons have been published from time to time in Canada and the U.S. that repeatedly demonstrate that grocery retailing is a notoriously low profit margin industry compared to most other industries.
However, before turning to the issue at hand, I want to address this overarching narrative that has emerged in recent times concerning corporate profitability, because some parliamentarians have criticized the profitability of certain select corporations. I would suggest, in my judgment, that this is a mistake on two levels.
First, Canada and other OECD countries do not regulate wages or prices, and Parliament does not regulate profit margins. There's no act of Parliament that does that. That's the job of competition.
Secondly, the late Harvard economist, Joseph Schumpeter, and Harvard strategy professor Michael Porter have taught us that firms exist to create something of value. This can occur only if firms generate sufficient resources to cover their costs. They have to be profitable.
Indeed, I saw that as a former banker. From time to time I had to put businesses into bankruptcy because they didn't make a profit. They couldn't cover their costs. All the employees were laid off. That's not a good thing.
Where I'm going with this is.... I understand your concern about profitability. Some argue that it's the rate or the degree of profitability. To address this claim, we have to examine the actual evidence-based, audited financial statements of companies that have been so accused.
For the fiscal year ending 2021, the net profit margin for Loblaws was 3.7%. For Empire-Sobeys it was 2.7%, and for Metro it was 4.5%. These net profit margins may seem very high to people who are unfamiliar with evidence-based analysis. In fact, retail grocery store net profit margins are unbelievably low—absolutely and relatively—compared to the double-digit profit margins in pharma, banking, beverages, automotive manufacturing, chemicals, computers, construction, electronics, entertainment and health care products. I haven't touched all of them.
Why the confusion? The critics are looking only at the end of the food chain and seeing the retail prices of the grocery retailers increasing, and then leaping to the conclusion that the retailers caused the price increases. They didn't, but how do we know?
We turn to StatsCan's empirical evidence. I provided to you an infographic from StatsCan, which was published only in December. It's for wheat-based products only, but most of those inputs identified by StatsCan in fact are used throughout the food chain. Diesel, pesticides and trucking costs each show stunning increases. It's a 34% increase for pesticides, 28% for energy and 20% for trucking.
I'll be wrapping up now.
There's another way to test the allegation of what's being called “greedflation” by those who don't accept the StatsCan data. We can examine food inflation rates only—not general inflation, only food—in other OECD countries. If the grocery retailers in Canada were raising their prices beyond the price increases in their input costs from farmers or wholesalers, it would show up in higher food inflation rates in Canada relative to other OECD countries.
Fortunately, the OECD has just released very fresh comparative food inflation data from only two weeks ago. It shows that food inflation in Canada is not above but below the OECD average. It's below France's, below Germany's and below the U.K.'s.
In conclusion, the evidence-based research from the audited financial statements of Canadian grocery retailers, the statistical data from Statistics Canada and the statistical OECD food price inflation data conclusively demonstrate that the claim of “greedflation” or excessive price increases by the grocery retailers is factually without any foundation at all.
Thank you.
:
Thank you very much, Mr. Chair, and thank you to the witnesses for being here today.
I found it very interesting, Professor Lee, to hear you talk about evidence-based research. As one of the facts you used, you said that there could be no “greedflation”, or there could be no excess profits, because Canada's food inflation is below the OECD average, yet our other two witnesses are arguing that it is in fact the Canadian price on pollution that is causing this food inflation.
I'm interested to hear, from an evidence-based perspective, how those two things reconcile. How is it that our food inflation is less, with our price on pollution taken into consideration, than the OECD average, yet the price on pollution is being blamed for the increase in food prices?
:
Thank you very much, Mr. Chair, and thank you to our witnesses for helping guide our committee through this study.
I think I would like to start my line of questioning with the Canadian Taxpayers Federation. I want to expand a little on Ms. Taylor Roy's last number of points.
One of our witnesses in a previous panel was Jim Stanford, who provided our committee with some helpful graphs. I know your position on carbon pricing. I think that's no secret to anyone who has read your briefs on this. However, he was presenting data that showed that since 2019, oil and gas extraction has seen its net profits go up by over 1000%. Petroleum refining has seen its profits, since 2019, go up by 40%.
I understand your position on carbon pricing, but do you not think it's a bit of a disservice to Canadians if you're focusing only on carbon pricing and not talking about how those other net profits, those massive increases, are also affecting our farmers and what families are paying at the pump? Do you not owe it to Canadians to maybe broaden your narrative to talk a little more wholeheartedly about some of those other factors and how they're causing families a lot of pain at the pump and at the grocery store?
:
Thank you, Mr. Chair, and thank you to the witnesses.
I want to focus on what I think is a connection between what Mr. Boxall was saying and what Mr. Lee was saying in terms of looking at the supply chain. I'll start with Mr. Boxall and then go over to Mr. Lee, with the time I have left, on vertical integration of some of the systems we're talking about.
Mr. Boxall, I love the idea of the grocery code of conduct, but it is part of the overall supply of food. You're at the very starting point of it, and the price of seeds has also gone up, as has everything else, for your inputs. Then we have the transportation sector and then the wholesalers and distributors.
You mentioned some of the policies around.... I talked to some of the farmers around my area, who have said that some of the large chains will hold back payments, pay on 120 days, pay lower margins and really squeeze the people who are supplying them.
Could you maybe comment on what we could do to address the food pricing system as an overall system?
Thank you, colleagues.
On behalf of all of you, let me thank Professor Lee, Mr. Boxall and Mr. Terrazzano. Thank you for your testimony today and for driving into our study.
Just before you go, colleagues, on Wednesday we will be in camera, studying global food insecurity. That's the second round of that report. Please come prepared to discuss that.
Next Monday, our intention will be to continue with this study. I believe, Madam Clerk, we have confirmed that the CEO from Walmart will be joining us for the first hour. For the second hour, we will go in camera to continue the third round of the global food insecurity report, and we'll give some reflections to our analysts to get them started on this report, so at least we can get them moving in that direction.
Finally, with your indulgence, given the fact that the budget is coming on Tuesday, there is lots for us to pore over, as members of Parliament. I would propose that we break on that particular day and then come back at it in earnest in April, unless there are some strong objections to that. We can discuss it before heading into next week, if you'd like.
I don't see any strong objections. That will be the pathway we take. We'll see everyone on Wednesday.
Thank you to our witnesses.
The meeting is adjourned.