 Mr. Speaker, I beg to move for second reading of Bill and Title Income Tax Amendment Act. Thank you Mr. Speaker. Mr. Speaker, this amendment to the Income Tax Act, Mr. Speaker, is actually an amendment to emphasise and to re-emphasise the philosophical position of the Government of Salvation, Mr. Speaker. A philosophical position that puts people first and a philosophical position that says that there must be opportunity for all and those who receive less are not unduly disadvantaged, Mr. Speaker. Mr. Speaker, you may know that any contractor who gets a $10,000 contract with the Government, when he goes to the Treasury Department, 10% is deducted from his earnings. So if he gets a little contract for $5,000 to cut some grass or to kill the drain, when he goes to the Treasury, the Government takes $500. So he gets $4,500. Mr. Speaker, the margins are very small in these small $10,000 jobs. The margins are very small and contractors come in all the time that even though they get a job, they get nothing from the contract because they are charged 10% by the Government before they pay the workers etc., Mr. Speaker. So we decided, Mr. Speaker, that we would exempt payments of $10,000 and less from the 10% deduction, Mr. Speaker. I mean this also brings us to line, brings it to line, brings it to line with the deductions made by ordinary employees because nobody in this country who gets less than $2,000 a month, $24,000 a year pays any taxes. You pay no income taxes with that. If you get less than $24,000 a year, you don't pay any taxes. When you add your allowances, it comes to $25,400. You pay no taxes. So when a contractor who gets two contracts for $10,000 a year, he actually pays $2,000 tax and the ordinary employee who gets the same $24,000 doesn't pay any taxes, Mr. Speaker. So Mr. Speaker, we fought and these small contractors, many of them do not get more than two contracts per year for less than, for more than $10,000, they don't get it with the speaker. These contracts are small contracts, $5,000, $6,000, sometimes $2,000 and for $2,000 to take up 10% from it, we get a person $2,000, $7,000, Mr. Speaker. Before that, it was unfair and this is what the amendment is all about, Mr. Speaker. It doesn't mean that when contractors graduate, they don't have to file their taxes, Mr. Speaker. So all payments and if that is converted to the private sector, Mr. Speaker, when the private sector gives up a list of people who have been paid for the contracts that they do, Mr. Speaker, the adequate provisions would be made if from the private sector. So if the private sector follows, they must ensure that they send that list to the inner-revenue so that the appropriate contracts can be made in Sweden. For musicians, for anybody of this nature, if you pay less than $10,000, they have to take up 10% tax, income tax and then when you send the return, the appropriate adjustments are going to be made in Sweden. So we thought that was a measure to assist the ordinary person who has a little job for $5,000. You take out $5,000 and sometimes they make nothing. But that's a bigger picture. The Ministry of Infrastructure is in the process of preparing a sort of analysis to show what percentage would be labor and what percentage would be materials for jobs. Even jobs, more than $10,000, but within a particular threshold, Mr. Speaker. So this is again another move by this government, Mr. Speaker, to give people relief from income tax. So you are seeing any $10,000 below? No, I see it working. $10,000, nothing above $10,000. They have $5,000 contracts. That's the question. The $5,000 and that's a very good question. What will happen to him now is that his records are going to be in revenue. He has to file his return. He has to file. And when he files, then the appropriate adjustments are going to be made. So Mr. Speaker, this is what the amendment is all about. To assist small people who get these small contracts without paying taxes in the first instance. Thank you, Mr. Speaker.