Wednesday, December 01, 1993

DECEMBER 1993 Economic Digest - Importing and Exporting



DECEMBER 1993 Edition

POST NAFTA   
            While the recent NAFTA vote was very important, the subsequent Asia Pacific Economic Co-operation (APEC) meeting in Seattle was also of great significance. NAFTA opens a market of 90 million consumers, APEC represents a total market of more than 1.6 billion. The IMF estimates that East Asia will account for half the increase in the world's economic production between now and 2000. They will want to buy telephones, washing machines and refrigerators; their governments will want power plants, bridges and airports; their industries will want lumber, minerals, oil and gas.
            Canada, increasingly, is a Pacific trading nation. Our exports to the region ($15.7-billion in 1991) now exceed our exports to Western Europe ($13.4-billion). Economic growth in the Asia-Pacific should average about 7 per cent this year and next--compared to a world average of only 1.5 per cent. In China, growth has averaged 9 per cent a year for more than a decade, while in much-overlooked Indonesia, the size of the economy has doubled since 1985. According to the Asia Pacific Foundation,  Canadian firms are not taking advantage of the new opportunities in China and Asian leaders are perplexed by Canada's lack of aggressiveness.  

ANATOMY OF A TRADE DISPUTE
            As part of the trade-off to gather votes for the NAFTA vote in Congress, President Clinton is reported to be considering imposing emergency quotas on wheat imports from Canada. Specifically, the problem is with durum wheat used for pasta, certain cereals and some Italian breads. Imports of Canadian durum have increased in recent years and account for about 20 per cent of U.S. consumption. Farm-state senators have chosen an unfortunate time to denounce imports since U.S. durum wheat prices (roughly $4.50 a bushel) are far above federal target prices--the prices picked by congressmen to guarantee most full-time farmers a generous income.
            U.S. production of durum wheat has nose-dived since 1981, falling from 5.8-million acres annually to just over two million acres in 1993. The Conservation Reserve Program (CRP), under which the government pays farmers to leave their land idle for 10 years, is the largest single set-aside program. A North Dakota senator complained in 1992 that the CRP has wiped out small town after small town since land was taken out of production.
            Even though U.S. farmers do not grow enough durum to meet U.S. consumption, the government still spends lavishly to dump U.S. durum wheat on world markets. The U.S. will subsidize the exports of more than 30 million bushels of durum wheat this year--roughly equal to the amount of Canadian imports.
            On Sept. 23, the Agriculture Department announced massive subsidies of durum wheat exports to South Africa, entitling American taxpayers to pay a subsidy of $1.75 per bushel for the export of wheat. The department will spend roughly $700-million to dump wheat on world markets this year. Wheat export subsidies have become so generous that they undercut unsubsidized exports of U.S. corn. The combination of falling U.S. production of durum and artificially increased demand for durum caused by export subsidies has driven the U.S. durum prices above the world price. Naturally, the high prices have been a signal to foreign producers that the U.S. market needs more durum.
            If the U.S. restricts Canadian wheat imports, the U.S. price of durum will likely spike higher. This would put U.S. pasta makers at an even greater disadvantage against imports. Foreigners can buy U.S. wheat much more cheaply than American food manufacturers. U.S. imports of pasta and pasta products have doubled since 1985 when the U.S. Department of Agriculture began dumping U.S. wheat on the world market at fire-sale prices. The U.S. lavishly subsidized durum exports to Turkey, where the wheat was processed into pasta and exported back to the United States. Industry experts predict that if Canadian wheat imports are restricted, some U.S. pasta-making plants could move to Canada.
            U.S senators are loudly denouncing Canadians for exporting subsidized wheat. In 1991, federal farm policy forced American taxpayers and consumers to pay wheat farmers
subsidies  equal to 78 per cent of the total value of wheat produced in the U.S.
            U.S. federal farm policy has turned wheat production--a historic American strength--into a perpetual burden on the national economy. Mr Clinton should not export the U.S. food-manufacturing industry by restricting imports. [From the Wall Street Journal].

WIN EXPORTS
            Managed by External Affairs and International Trade, and used exclusively by 1200 trade staff at offices around the world, WIN Exports is a computer database of Canadian exporters and their capabilities. Over 100,000 requests for export information from foreign buyers are received annually by Canada's Trade Commissioners who use the WIN Exports information daily. A company's information in the WIN Exports database will include basic company details, exported products and services, foreign markets and a company marketing profile. A number of registration forms for this database are available by calling Brian Strehler at A & A Contract Customs Brokers at 538-1042, or 1-800-663-4270.

ENTREPRENEURSHIP
            A Vermont maple-syrup farmer observed that his young sons were transfixed watching a brief segment on bulldozers on Sesame Street. So he went out and shot a 30-minute video of yellow bulldozers building a new road in rural New England. Just bulldozers, moving masses of dirt around and into dump trucks. This is now the hottest thing on the pre-school market. At $20 each, more than 150,000 have been sold and the farmer has grossed over $3-million. A second tape has been released with fire and rescue vehicles. They may be ordered from 1-800-461-3800.

VOLUNTEERS
            The impact of voluntary work on the economy is rarely considered, yet without it, many institutions would grind to a halt. The estimated monetary value of volunteer work in Canada, based on an average service wage, is $12-billion, a wage bill that represents 53 per cent of all wages paid in Canadian retailing and 43 per cent of the public sector wage bill, including all levels of government and the armed forces.       27 per cent of Canadians volunteer their time and the higher their education and income, the more likely they are to give their time. A volunteer averages about 191 hours a year (3.7 hours a week) at his or her unpaid job. Canada's volunteer force put in more than one billion hours of work a year--the equivalent of 617,000 full-time jobs, or the number of hours worked annually by the full-time labour forces of New Brunswick and Saskatchewan combined.

PUERTO RICO
            With a population of 3.6 million consumers and an American-style approach to business, Puerto Rico is Canada's third-largest export market in Latin America, after Mexico and Brazil. In 1992, the island imported $500-million worth of goods from Canada, a figure that should rise in the coming years. More information on this market can be obtained from John Alexander at the Canadian Consulate General in Atlanta, Georgia. Tel: (404) 577-6810. Fax: (404) 524-5046.

WOOD
            22 members of the B.C. Wood Specialty Group have prepared a portable building products exhibition to tour Japan's trade shows. B.C. already exports $800-million worth of specialty sized lumber to the Japanese building industry and last year sold $40-million worth of finished wood products. The Japanese finished building products market is worth $200-billion a year. Products to be displayed at Japanese trade shows will include kitchens, windows and aboriginal crafts.
            Another market for housing products is in the former East Germany where at least one million units are required immediately with another 100,000 needed annually. West Germany needs 400,000 units a year on top of the two million units required right away. The Canadian Trade Commissioner in Berlin says housing is the biggest area of opportunity for Canadians right now in Germany but that there are not enough companies interested. A Toronto entrepreneur, trying to line up Canadian suppliers for windows and doors for houses that already had buyers in Germany, wrote 430 letters to Canadian suppliers and had only three responses.
            Last year, members of the Canadian Construction Association did $95-billion of construction work, less than one per cent was overseas business.    

CULTURE
            The U.S. Congress is considering legislation to deter Canada from ever using a so-called cultural trade exemption in the Canada-U.S FTA. It would not change the two-part deal which has been in effect for nearly five years under which Canada can break FTA rules to protect cultural industries such as magazines, books, television and movies from U.S. competition. But the U.S can hit back with actions of "equal commercial effect" against Canadian goods. Canada has never invoked the exemption and the U.S has never retaliated.
            The new measure, part of the law implementing the NAFTA, calls for an annual review by the U.S Trade Representative to see if Canada is hurting U.S. cultural interests. If so, it would be listed as a "priority foreign country" for possible retaliation. The review can go back to Dec 17, 1992, the date Canada signed the NAFTA. U.S Senate staff lawyers claim that this measure is really aimed at the Europeans, particularly the French, that are seeking to limit U.S. cultural influence in the GATT negotiations.

EUROPE
            Small businesses will soon have access to a computerized co-operation network run by the European Community. By tapping into BC-NET, companies will gain quick, confidential and reliable information about potential allies.          The Canadian Chamber of Commerce will be the agent for BC-NET which should be operating this month in B.C., Ontario, Quebec and Nova Scotia. BC-NET was created in the mid-1980s for European firms but quickly expanded. Canada is the 25th non-EC country to participate, joining countries from Asia, Latin America, and Eastern Europe. So far, 70,000 companies, mostly small and medium-sized have had their profiles sent across the system. When a company makes a request for a partner, a qualified consultant analyses it and sends a message or profile to the EC's central computer in Brussels. The computer goes through a "matching" process based on codes of reference--that is, type of business, co-operation sought (commercial or technical, for example) and so on.

B.C TRADE
            Premier Harcourt has announced a $900,000 program to assist exporters outside the Lower Mainland. B.C. Trade, which will administer the program, will also establish offices in Nanaimo and Kelowna with economic development officers to provide assessment of regional exporters' potential and needs. The new program will also provide reduced export loan guarantee rates to regional companies, conduct market research for regional exporters, identify and assess specific export opportunities and develop an inventory of regional export potential. International exports generate about 25 per cent of B.C.'s gross domestic product and provide more than one in five jobs.

MEXICO
            Last year, Canada exported under $1-billion worth of goods to Mexico (0.5% of exports) and imported $2.8-billion (5% of imports). The U.S exported $48.7-billion to and imported $39.1-billion from Mexico. The top five exporting states to Mexico in $ billions were: Texas, $15.5, California, $5.5, Michigan, $1.6, Illinois, $1.8 and Arizona, $1-billion.
            The American Embassy in Mexico has identified the following as the best export prospects to Mexico for 1994: auto parts, power systems, machine tools, franchising, pollution control equipment, oil and gas field machinery and services, computers and peripherals, telecommunications equipment, chemical products and wood products. Canada is also competitive in several of these areas.