Wednesday, June 01, 1994

JUNE 1994 Economic Digest - Importing and Exporting



JUNE 1994 Edition
 
GENERAL AGREEMENT ON TARIFFS & TRADE
            After seven years of work, more than 125 countries recently signed the Uruguay Round of the GATT which the OECD estimates will eventually result in $250 billion extra in global economic growth. The final document totalled 26,000 pages and weighed 175 kilograms. The anticipated implementation date is next January 1st but it could be delayed until July 1995.
            The biggest gains are in four areas:
Textiles & Clothing: Trade will gradually become freer in this sector. The so-called Multifibre Agreement will be phased out over 10 years. Countries like Canada will no longer be able to impose import quotas in this area.
Agriculture: Quotas and outright bans on food imports will gradually disappear to be replaced by declining import tariffs and government subsidies should fall. It will become easier for developing countries to sell to developed countries. It will be more difficult for the rich economies to flood the world with cheap, surplus food.
Minerals. Tariffs will fall to zero on many metals and other minerals, allowing developing countries, with their lower production costs, to export more.
Manufactured goods: Many countries, especially in East Asia, have become major exporters of finished goods. The broad decrease  in tariffs agreed in the Uruguay Round--40 per cent overall--will make these goods cheaper for consumers in the industrialized world. They gain, we gain.

CROSS-BORDER TRIPS
            Canadian shopping excursions to the U.S. remained near a five-year low in March despite a seasonally adjusted 0.4 percent increase over February. Statistics Canada attributed the decline partly to a drop in the Canadian dollar against its U.S. counterpart. It said another factor was rising U.S. gasoline prices. Before adjustment for seasonal factors, same-day car trips to the U.S. were down 17 per cent from a year earlier.
            Trips by visitors to Canada of one or more nights have been increasing gradually over the past year. Overnight travel into Canada increased 2.7 per cent in March to 1.3 million trips. This type of travel was relatively constant between late 1986 and early last year but has been inching upwards since April 1993 because of the low Canadian dollar.

JAPAN
            Hands-on assistance to foreign businesses looking to gain a foothold in the lucrative Japanese marketplace will soon be available through Import Promotion Centres in four cities: Yokohama, Nagoya, Osaka and Kobe. This follows the positive response to the Business Support Centre which opened in Tokyo a year ago.
            The wide range of services provided include: private offices with telephone, fax, desk and cabinets; access to exhibition halls, personnel and a library. Further information is available from the Japan External Trade Organization (JETRO) office in Vancouver at 604-684-4174.

INFOCENTRE
            A new interactive fax information service (FaxLink), operated by Foreign Affairs and International Trade, Ottawa, can now be reached by dialling 613-944-4500 from an office fax machine (24 hours a day, seven days a week). Once connected, callers will be asked either to request an index of available faxables or to input the product code associated with the desired document(s). FaxLink presently includes information on the Access North America program and various documents on the GATT and NAFTA. The service will soon be expanded to include documentation on up-to-date foreign policy matters, and additional market information and intelligence of particular relevance to Canadian exporters. For additional information, there is a toll-free line 1-800-267-8376, from 09:00 to 17:00 (EST).

RETAIL
            During the first three months of the year, the amount of money Canadians spent in retail outlets took off. Sales in dollar terms were up more than 3 per cent from the final quarter of 1993, and with the consumer price index falling during that period, the real increase was closer to 4 per cent. The country hasn't seen such a jump since the late 1980s. By comparison, retail sales increased by less than 3 per cent in all of 1993.
            B.C. consumers spent $2.6 billion in both February and March. The March figures were a healthy 6.9 per cent higher than same month in 1993. National sales went from $16.94 billion in February to $17.16 in March.  Alberta had the strongest annual gain in retail sales at 13 per cent, followed by Nova Scotia at 9.4 per cent and Ontario with a 7.6 per cent increase. Experts say fashion sales have improved after lagging behind in recent years, though some fashion chains have not yet made the proper adjustments to inventory and pricing. Big-box retailers are doing well at the expense of the middle of the road, middle-size, middle pricing outlets.

SURREY
            Waugh Research was recently commissioned by the City of Surrey to undertake a survey of Surrey businesses on economic and development issues. 2354 survey packages were mailed which yielded 789 completed questionnaires, a remarkable 33.5 per cent response. Among the conclusions: 42 per cent of businesses are presently exporting products and services outside B.C,. 44 per cent to the U.S., 43 per cent to other Canadian provinces, 3 per cent to Europe, 2.5 per cent to Asia, 2 per cent to Japan, 1.6 per cent to China and 0.7 per cent to Mexico. 83 per cent of those exporting wish to increase their exports, with 82 per cent interested in the U.S. 63 per cent of companies plan to expand in the next three years, of which 69 per cent will increase employees, 54 per cent increase product\service lines and 50 per cent plan to expand their facilities. More information on this survey is available from Bruce Riddick, City of Surrey at 591-4333.

SHOPPING
            Supermarket lines could become a thing of the past according to a South African research group that wants to put microchips into shopping carts. The Pretoria-based Council for Scientific and Industrial Research recently demonstrated its "Supertag," a cart containing 50 different items imprinted with microchips that would take only one second to be scanned and priced. The CSIR described the device as a single integrated circuit chip which can broadcast its identity despite interference from other tags in the vicinity. This means that unlike products with barcodes that have to be read one at a time, products with the Supertag chip can be read at the same time, even when they are jumbled up with others in the cart.

OPPORTUNITY
            Cracking the Japanese market can be hard but Nu Skin International, a U.S. cosmetics manufacturer, has shown that selling door to door can yield spectacular results. After entering Japan less than a year ago, that country is already Nu Skin's top overseas  market. The company expects Japan sales to total some $100 million during the first 12 months, representing around one-fifth of its total sales. Nu Skin now has some 100,000 Japanese sales agents representing its products. The reasons for this success are attributed to Japan's population density and emphasis on relationships and family ties.

TRANSPORT
            A Memorandum of Understanding signed March 1st between Canada and Mexico allows Canadian trucks to travel 20 kilometres
into Mexico. Trucks originating in Canada may now load further goods in the U.S. for drop-off in Mexico and, even more usefully, load goods in Mexico for distribution in the U.S. as well as Canada on the way back. The quantity of trucked goods directly from Mexico for Canadian receivers is relatively light; having products for the U.S. markets makes the return journey more viable. It is the first time foreign trucks have been allowed into Mexico. By the end of 1995, commercial trucking to virtually any area in North America will be open to trucks from NAFTA countries.

AGING
            People over 50 now make up about 26 per cent of the population but own 80 per cent of financial assets in Canada. This group also control 55 per cent of discretionary income. They purchase 43 per cent of all new cars and 48 per cent of new luxury cars. The value of real estate owned mortgage-free by this age group is about $500 billion, approaching the total Canadian yearly economy. 60-plus people have an average income of $27,000 to 35,000 per person putting their average household income in the $60,000 range. Most of that income is disposable since most people in this age bracket are debt-free. Seniors in Canada hold about a trillion dollars in assets. Big marketing areas for the grey group involve financial services, pharmaceuticals, travel, automotive, health and fitness.

WORLD MARKETS
            World Markets at Your Doorstep is a one-day trade show and seminar that has proved successful in the East. Continuing across Canada, it will arrive in Vancouver December 8th. The Market helps exporters and potential exporters tap into the global networks, contacts and expertise of Canadian and International trading houses. To date, manufacturers who have attended the events have generated an estimated $25 million in new export sales and ventures. Their success is due to one objective: introducing qualified suppliers to selected trading houses and their extensive overseas contacts and expertise. Interested B.C. suppliers should contact Dale Harvey of the B.C. Institute for Studies in International Trade. Tel: 844-1905, Fax: 660-3917. Trading houses should contact Mike Reshitnyk at Foreign Affairs and International
Trade, Ottawa. Tel: 613-996-1862.

BUILDING
            A $28 billion effort to rebuild post-war Lebanon could be a huge opportunity for Canada's construction industry if it makes an effort. However, most Canadians ignore the Middle East market in favour of the U.S. and the Pacific Rim. As Iraq, Israel and Gaza rebuild their cities, Canadian businesses have a 10 year window of opportunity to sell concrete forming panels, two-by-fours, trusses, flooring, wall coverings, paint, shutters, blinds and epoxies. Saudi Arabia will spend $56 billion during the next five years to build homes, schools, commercial centres and health care facilities. Kuwait, which by law provides free homes for all nationals, has a current backlog of 60,000 units, a $4 billion market for  construction materials.

BOEING
            Several Canadian companies have a big stake in Boeing Co.'s newest aircraft, the Boeing 777, which was officially rolled out in April. The landing gear, fairings, aerodynamic coverings for struts holding the engines, control columns and other aluminum components are supplied by 15 Canadian companies with contracts worth $635 million, so far. To date, 16 airlines have announced 147 orders and 108 options for the new aircraft.

HOOVER: THE FINAL CHAPTER
            Readers may recall that we reported last year on the marketing fiasco by Hoover, the UK appliance manufacturer, a division of Maytag Corp. Consumers were offered two free return tickets to Europe or the U.S. if they purchased any appliance valued at $150. The campaign created an enormous response by consumers who were better at maths than were Hoover executives, three of whom lost their jobs. It also created a gigantic second-hand market in unused Hoover products.
            The final bill has been tallied and the cost is around $99 million. By the time the promotion ends this spring, Hoover will have flown more than 220,000 people free. A year ago, Maytag reduced profits $40 million to help resolve the problem but the bill turned out to be much higher. Even now, Hoover is not certain all the bills have been paid.

E-MAIL
            It is estimated that by 1995 North America's top 2,000 companies will exchange 14.3 billion E-mail messages. In a recent legal action over intellectual property in Palo Alto, California, the E-mail messages of four key corporate executives were ordered up by an attorney; the printout was 100,000 pages long.