Sunday, November 01, 1992

NOVEMBER 1992 Economic Digest - Importing and Exporting



NOVEMBER 1992 Edition

NAFTA

            It remains to be seen if president-elect Bill Clinton will ask to have the NAFTA agreement reopened. He suggested during the election campaign that, while he supported NAFTA, he wanted to review the effect of the pact on U.S. labour and the environment. Canadian and Mexican officials have said that they will oppose any changes to the deal.
            According to Canadian External Affairs, one of the most important, and overlooked, benefits of NAFTA to Canada is the opening up of contract opportunities with Washington which will rise to $78-billion (US) from the present $20-billion under the Canada-U.S. free trade agreement.
            Under NAFTA, purchases by U.S. federal departments and agencies (including bodies such as Amtrak and the Tennessee Valley Authority) of $25,000 for goods and $50,000 for services will be open to bidding by Canadian companies. Under the FTA, Canadian companies were not eligible to bid on services.

FTA

            One of the benefits of FTA not often mentioned is the fact that American trade associations are now increasingly accepting Canadian companies as members.
            In Toronto, Grey Tool Co, a manufacturer of hand tools and metal forgings selling into the U.S. for 12 years, has joined an U.S trade association and is now able to exhibit at major trade shows south of the border. Last year, at its first trade show, Grey Tool picked up 17 new customers and has boosted U.S sales to 40% of total sales compared to 25% a few years ago. 
            The Canadian Trade Commissioner Service and consulates in the U.S. can be very helpful in this regard. If any of our readers wish the address of a Canadian consulate in the U.S. or details concerning a particular trade association, please let us know and we shall endeavour to track down the information.
            Meanwhile, an American flour milling company has quietly slipped into Vancouver, which it was unable to do before FTA, and is reporting sales of over $300,000 a month after one year in business.

JAPANESE INVESTMENT
           
            After a decade of investing heavily in B.C., Japanese investment in the province has recently ground to a halt. According to a report released by the Japanese External Trade Organization (JETO), the number of companies setting up shop in Canada has declined from an average of 17 a year in the 1980s to just one in 1991.
            The purchase of the Chateau Whistler early in 1991 was the last major purchase in that area where the Japanese own about 40% of all hotels. Two major projects have recently been abandoned.
            The JETO report blames the GST, the strengthening Canadian dollar, the Canada-U.S. free-trade agreement and the world recession for the declining investment.
            Local financial analysts blame this year's real-estate and stock market crash in Japan suggesting that the Japanese have been spending far beyond their means throughout the 1980s and have been selling off assets up and down the Pacific Coast in order to pay back the banks.

RETAILING

            Experts are cautiously predicting a retail sales growth of around three per cent this Christmas over last year. A survey conducted by Deloitte & Touche showed that more than 70% of retailers expect higher sales this year and 40% of consumers reported that they had already started their Christmas shopping.   Besides slightly increased consumer confidence, sales are expected to increase because, for the last six months, same day trips to the U.S. have dropped due to the declining Canadian dollar and Canadian retailers are increasing service and decreasing margins, thus becoming more competitive.
            In September, department store sales were up 11.5% in B.C. over the same month last year. Nationally, sales were up 4.4% for the same period.

EMPLOYMENT

            A job creation boom boosted B.C. employment by 16,000 jobs in October, the greatest number of jobs created in the province since August of 1991. Over-all, B.C. employment has increased by 1.1% while Canada has seen a decline of about one per cent. According to Canada Employment and Immigration, immigration from other provinces and countries continues to fuel B.C.'s economic growth where the population is growing twice as fast as the rest of the country. Most of B.C.'s employment growth was in public administration, primary industries and the wholesale trade.
            Meanwhile, in Toronto, Canada's largest city, more than 200,000 people have lost their jobs since the start of the recession. Toronto bankruptcies in the period January to August were up 13.8 per cent compared with the same period in 1991.           
            Canada's unemployment rate is now down to 11.3 per cent while the U.S. Labour Department says that unemployment in the U.S. inched down to a six month low of 7.4 per cent in October even though employers hired few new workers. The rate reduction probably occurred because many teen-agers returned to school, shrinking the labour force, not because more people found jobs.

CASCADIA

            A & A Contract Customs Brokers recently attended a meeting with retiring Washington State Congressman John Miller who, with Canadian M.P. Bob Wenman, is promoting the Cascadia concept--the corridor of urban centres running from Vancouver to Portland.
            Now we have learned that the U.S. Congress has passed legislation in support of an international forum to manage growth in the Cascadia region and pledged $400,000 (US) to help set up the commission which will deal with issues such as transportation and the environment in the corridor which is also known as the Georgia-Puget Basin. 
            Congressman Miller has said, "The Cascadia corridor is exploding. If federal, state, provincial and local governments do not work together our region will lose the living quality that makes us want to live here."
            In a related development, there has been talk of reviving rail service between Seattle and Vancouver. The Washington State legislature has approved $5-million (US) to begin upgrading tracks and level crossings and Amtrack has pledged enough rolling stock to run two trains a day in and out of Vancouver.     Also, the U.S. government has designated the Portland-Seattle-Vancouver axis as a high speed rail corridor, freeing up about $1-million a year in federal grants for the next five years to improve tracks. No detailed planning has yet been done on the Canadian side of the border.

COMMERCIAL ESPIONAGE

            With the Cold War over, it seems that it is no longer the KGB we have to worry about. According to U.S. intelligence officials, the French government and its agents are the new foes. It is alleged that they have :-
*  Steered American defence officials and businesses to bugged Air France seats and Paris hotel rooms.
*  Tapped French phone lines to obtain faxed  contract bids and new product designs from U.S. companies.
*  Placed moles in U.S. computer firms in Paris and Silicon Valley to obtain breakthrough technology and stolen garbage in Houston in search of industrial secrets.
*  Recruited French nationals employed by the U.S. embassy in Paris to spy on visiting American VIPs.
*  Posed as non-defence customers to obtain classified U.S. "stealth" technology.
*  Exploited inside knowledge of an intended U.S. dollar devaluation to make a killing on international currency markets.
            Japan, Britain, South Korea, Taiwan and China were also named before a congressional committee as countries that have targeted the U.S. for spying. The head of the French equivalent to the CIA was remarkably candid in admitting, "In the technological competition we are competitors, we are not allies."

EXPORTING

            The U.S. Department of Commerce recently invited A & A Contract Customs Brokers to act as a resource at a workshop they sponsored in Seattle to educate U.S. businesses about international transportation and documentation. This was clearly an attempt by the U.S. government to encourage companies to consider the opportunities that exist for exporting to Canada.
            If there is sufficient interest among our readers, we would be pleased to consider organizing a similar workshop for Canadian companies wanting more information about the paperwork required to export to the United States.

FORESTRY

            A recent survey of the world's 50 largest forestry firms ranks Canada's  major forest companies as the industry's worst financial performers in 1991, a Price Waterhouse report says. Finnish companies were the only other to report net aggregate losses but they lost much less than their Canadian competitors.
            Net losses for Canada's five largest forestry companies were $950-million (US) and $289-million for Finnish firms. The Canadian companies ranked in the top 50 internationally by sales were Noranda Forest Inc. and Abitibi- Price Inc, both of Toronto; MacMillan-Bloedel Ltd of Vancouver, Domtar Inc. and Canadian Pacific Forest Products Ltd. of Montreal.
                       
LABOUR LAW

            The Government of B.C. has at last introduced its labour legislation which includes proposals to allow certification without secret votes, restrictions on replacement workers and secondary boycotts.
            A coalition of major business groups is objecting strenuously to the proposals and threatening to stop co-operating with the government in several areas if the bill is not amended. They intend to refuse to accompany the Premier on international trade missions, participate in a joint labour-management institute or to attend any talks on the economy or other issues.
            In Ontario, where such legislation has been in effect for some months, the government is now turning to the most far-reaching employment-equity legislation in North America.
            The province's Bill 79--introduced in June-- would have all companies with 50 or more employees set goals and timetables for the hiring and promotion of women, visible minorities, natives and the disabled. The business community is quoted as being generally "positive about employment equity but worried about the implementation process." Two lobby groups have sprung up in recent months claiming the law discriminates against white males.
            If this legislation is successful, can B.C. be far behind?

TRIVIA

            Ottawa has helped itself to ever-greater portions of income over the past eight decades.
* In 1920, the federal share of personal and corporate income tax was $87 million. In 1960 it was $3,161 million and $70,997 million in 1990.
* In 1920 personal income tax as a percentage of total direct taxes was 37%. In 1960 it was 60% and 81% in 1990.
* In 1958 federal MP's earned $8,000 plus a $2,000 tax free allowance. In 1970 it had risen to $18,000 and an allowance of $8,000. In 1990 the minimum salary was $64,400 and $27,300 in allowances.
* The total cost of Parliament per MP in 1990 was $770,000 and it required a 476 page manual to detail the "allowances and services for MP's."
* A Senator can earn $75,000 a year just for showing up once for every two consecutive sessions of Parliament.