Monday, March 01, 1993

MARCH 1993 Economic Digest - Importing and Exporting



MARCH 1993 Edition

NAFTA
            The federal government has announced that it will spend $27-million over four years to help Canadian businesses seize opportunities opened up by NAFTA. Key elements of the program, called Access North America, are focused on enabling Canadian companies to gain a foothold in Mexico.
            Trade Minister Wilson stated that Mexico is a fast-growing economy that will need telecommunications products, infrastructure assistance, environmental services, new technology and other goods and services that Canada produces. Canadian business has already shown heightened interest in Mexico. 4,500 business people visited the Canadian embassy in Mexico City last year compared to only 2,100 such visits in 1991.

EXPORTS
             Medieval Glass Industries, maker of cut-glass windows and doors with more than 130 different designs, has grown each year since it opened in 1986 and employs 65 staff. Now, with the help of a B.C. export loan guarantee, Medieval has signed a new contract to supply a 45-store chain in the U.S. midwest which will add another dozen jobs at their Richmond plant.
            V-W Canada imports Audis, Porches and Volkswagens but has turned into a large Canadian exporter. In 1991 the company exported $195-million worth of components, parts and accessories from its plant in Barrie, Ontario. The figure rose to $224-million in 1992. Besides eleven different wheel styles  which are exported all over the world, the plant has won contracts for catalytic converters going to Germany and Mexico.
           
FACTORIES
            Canadian factories are making themselves more efficient and productive. The ability to deliver goods just when the customer needs them has become a new competitive fighting ground. Big inventories cost money and a big backlog of unfilled orders can mean lost customers. A decade ago, factories typically kept inventories equivalent to about two months of shipments; that figure is now down to about six weeks. Key factory trends are:-
*           Smaller inventories of finished goods and raw materials.       
*           "Partnering" with suppliers and customers, so companies get their supplies and ship their products only as needed.
*           Electronic data interchange systems that link partners who have established a close relationship.

ECONOMY
            Reports of an end to the recession have done little to reassure Canadians, who cite the economy as their No. 1 concern. 48% of 1,501 Canadians surveyed in February indicated the economy was the "most pressing issue currently facing the country," while unemployment was named by 45% followed by the federal deficit at 18 per cent. Central Canada was most concerned about the economy, Atlantic Canada and Quebec cited the unemployment rate and the West was concerned about the national debt.Other issues mentioned were the environment, free trade and political leadership--six per cent each; and taxes, social services and national unity at five per cent.
           
EDUCATION   
            Education employs one in ten Canadians and accounts for almost 6 per cent of gross domestic product. More British Columbians works as university professors than as logging or forestry workers. The education industry is larger than  mining, forestry, food, beverage, rubber, plastics and clothing industries combined. Increasingly, communities see the presence of high-quality educational facilities as a powerful advantage for economic development. Education creates high knowledge-intensive, entrepreneurial spinoffs, which produce quality jobs.
           
ENVIRONMENT
            Recent surveys have shown that consumers now put value ahead of anything else. People are so price sensitive that many suppliers are switching their emphasis to bulk buying, not what retailers expected two or three years ago when it was regarded as good marketing to demonstrate social consciousness by coming out with a line of green products.
            In 1988, green promises were made for only 1.1 per cent of new packaged goods that appeared on the Canadian market. By 1991, that figure had soared to 33.9 per cent, only to plummet to 9.4 per cent last year. The trend in the U.S. and Europe was similar but less dramatic.
            The Loblaw chain has almost halted the introduction of green products after having set the pace for several years. The company sells about $100-million a year of its more than 100 green products but brought out only three new ones last year. It is now concentrating on upgrading its original products. Of 31 per cent of shoppers surveyed who claimed to be most concerned about the environment, only 28 per cent said they would pay a premium for green goods.

RETAIL
            Industry experts claim that warehouse and discount retailers will vault ahead of traditional department stores in sales of general merchandise this year. Price slashing giants like Price Club and Zellers  will continue to widen their lead over Canada's three major department store chains.
            A Toronto retailing seminar was advised that the consumer has changed dramatically and will continue to change. Much of the trend to low-margin retailing is being driven not just by economics, but by shifts in demographics and social attitudes.
            The baby boom generation reached its peak family-forming years in the 1980s which caused an upturn in the demand for houses and the things to go in them. Now, the biggest spending segment of the population--those between 24 and 34--is shrinking while the average age of the population is rising. Older people tend to shop at fewer stores and spend less.

TRAVEL DEFICIT
            Canadians spent a record $8.3-billion  more outside the country in 1992 than foreign visitors spent here, 10 per cent more than in 1991. $11.2-billion was spent by Canadians in the U.S. and $5.1-billion in other countries.
U.S. visitors to Canada spent $4.6-billion in Canada and other foreign visitors spent $3.4-billion here. On trips to the U.S. longer than one night, Canadians stay on average 7.2 nights spending $57 a night, while U.S. visitors to Canada stay an average of only 3.7 nights but spend $74 a night.
            Two factors might help to level the playing field. The lower Canadian dollar will make overseas trips more expensive for Canadians but cheaper for U.S. visitors to Canada. (The B.C. government has just announced that it will close the tourism offices in Seattle and California!). "Snowbirds" who traditionally spend the winter months down south are finding it increasingly difficult to get health insurance and the dollar and U.S. inflation  have reduced their purchasing power by more than 37 per cent over the last 11 years.
 
BRITISH COLUMBIA
            The Investment Dealers Association forecasts that the B.C. economy, as well as that of Alberta, should outperform the rest of Canada for the sixth consecutive year but warns the that the growth might not be sustainable if the government maintains its current spending and tax policies.
            B.C.'s expansion will be spurred by the continuing flow of migrants to the province from Canada and abroad and by exports, now rising because of the lower Canadian dollar and economic recovery in the U.S. and Japan.

SERVICES
            We thought it would be worth reproducing extracts from a recent article on manufacturing and services in the highly respected Economist.
            " Only manufacturing industry can create real wealth and proper jobs," is the battle cry of many businessmen and politicians in America, Europe and Japan. They fear that the falling share of manufacturing in countries' GDPs heralds inexorable economic decline unless governments help with an `industrial policy.'
            Manufacturing matters no more than services, but no less than them, either, they are interdependent. Computers would be useless without software writers and nobody would buy a car if there were no gas stations. Indeed, the distinction between industry and services is now largely meaningless. In rich countries today, over half the workers in a typical manufacturing firm do service-type jobs--design, distribution, financial planning, only a minority make things on a factory floor.
            Another myth about service industries is that their productivity lags behind that of manufacturing. Official statistics show that productivity in services has been dismal. Partly, this is because it is difficult to define, let alone measure, a unit of output in services. Despite this shortcoming, there are many non-statistical signs that a productivity revolution is sweeping through services. Cocooned for years by restrictive practices, services are now being liberalized and exposed to competition. Privatization and deregulation are having a much bigger impact on services than manufacturing, forcing airlines, banks and telecommunications firms to become more efficient.
            Another misconception about services is that they offer less scope for international trade than goods. Haircuts and hotel rooms cannot be shipped abroad. So if manufacturing shrinks, how will a country earn the foreign exchange needed to import video recorders or cars? Today, more and more services are tradable. The share of services in U.S. total exports has risen from 20 per cent to 30 per cent in the past 10 years alone. The opportunities for expanding exports of finance, consultancy and telecommunications are vast, through cross-border sales or foreign direct investment. Deregulation is opening more markets to foreign suppliers of services.
            Rich countries would gain handsomely if poorer countries opened their service markets even wider to foreign firms as part of a deal under the Uruguay round of trade talks. Instead, rich countries have foolishly denied themselves such gains by refusing to cut subsidies and protection for their own much smaller farming sectors. Services now account for 60 per cent or more of the rich countries' Gross Domestic Product. Manufacturing's share will continue to dwindle as more low-tech factories move to countries where labour-intensive assembly or other operations can be performed more cheaply.  The comparative advantage of industrial economies lies increasingly in services.
            Writing computer programs creates more added value than churning out computer discs. Those activities with the highest value added are those with the highest wages. If Munich or Chicago really want to hold onto jobs that can be done in Monterrey and Shanghai, then their citizens will need to be happy on Mexican or Chinese wages.
            Manufacturing snobs who sniff that their firms are more valuable than pizza parlours have an out-of-date image of services. Thanks to new technology, fewer service-industry jobs are clerical or manual and more require cerebral skills. More than half the workers in rich countries are employed in the production, storage, retrieval or distribution of knowledge.
            The best `industrial policy' is one that provides a sound macro-economic climate, opens the country to competition, and equips people with the education and skills for tomorrow's knowledge-based business."   

TRIVIA
*           Employees of Britton Plastics Ltd. of the U.K are being paid in cocoa beans. The scheme allows them to pay a reduced rate of National Insurance contributions. They get a pay slip telling them how many beans they own and can receive bonuses if cocoa does well on the commodity market. Benefits and pensions are still received in cash.
*           Despite economic hard times, the United Way of the Lower Mainland and the Vancouver office of OXFAM say donations were up in 1992. Statscan reports that in 1991 donations to charities increased seven per cent to $3.1-billion over the $2.9-billion given in 1990. Giving per capita was highest in Newfoundland ($230), followed by P.E.I. ($220), and lowest in B.C. and Alberta ($130 each) and Quebec ($80).