Monday, August 01, 1994

AUGUST 1994 Economic Digest - Importing and Exporting

AUGUST 1994 Edition

ABOUT OURSELVES
            With this issue, we start the third year of our Economic Digest. It began with a modest distribution of 75 and now reaches over 750  monthly. It goes to most Canadian provinces and every State in the Union. One copy goes to Beijing. Information from it is translated and published in the Trading Post, a Vancouver Chinese Newspaper with a 15,000 circulation. A shorter version is available downtown courtesy of B.C. Trade.
            The Digest earns no revenue, in fact it costs us a considerable amount over the course of a year. But we hope that we continue to generate goodwill through this venture as we strive to show that we are interested in all aspects of the economy, not just the area in which A & A Contract Customs Brokers is specialist. It is our philosophy that if the economy is doing well, then we all benefit, whatever our business.
            We always have far more information left each month than we are able to fit in the Digest. In the coming year we hope to expand the sharing of this information utilizing the new technology. Using Faxback, we would like to make single-page Digests available monthly on specific sectors such as Retail, Manufacturing, EDI and USA\NAFTA. If readers have any suggestions about areas you would like to see us cover, please call us at 538-1042, or Toll Free 1-800-663-4270.

INTERPROVINCIAL TRADE
            The recent deal to reduce trade barriers between provinces is less ambitious than hoped, but makes progress in key areas such as procurement and investment. Governments will no longer be able to favour provincial suppliers in tendering for goods worth more than $25,000 and for services or construction projects over $100,000. The provisions will be extended to municipalities, municipal organizations, school boards and publicly funded academic, health and social institutions by June 1996. Governments spend about $49 billion a year on goods and services.
            Provinces will be prevented from using incentives such as tax breaks, grants or debt guarantees to get businesses from another province to relocate. Also, qualified workers will find it easier to work in another province and provinces will recognize licensing and other work standards in other provinces. Consumer health and safety standards cannot be used to discriminate against out-of-province suppliers. A work plan is to be completed by 1996 which will see common provincial standards for the trucking industry such as truck weights and dimensions, safety rules and bills of cargo.
            However, the agreement leaves in place barriers to agriculture, energy and alcohol. Consumers will still pay too much for electricity, milk and eggs and have less choice in wine and beer. Disputes will be handled by a panel of experts. Decisions are not binding but will be made public and the injured province will have the right to retaliate with measures of "equivalent effect."

HEALTH CARE
            Industry Canada has developed the Canadian Health Care Services Suppliers (CHCSS) computerized data base in collaboration with Health Canada. The CHCSS is being launched to enhance the Department's knowledge of Canadian private sector supply capability and to facilitate the matching of export opportunities with Canadian supply capability. The information in the database will also be used to encourage the formation of industry alliances and other partnerships for the pursuit of export opportunities.
            Interested applicants complete a questionnaire and profile sheet and return them, with company brochures, to Industry Canada. Search capabilities are extensive and users will be able to search on the basis of any fields (questions) contained in the questionnaire. To obtain a questionnaire or more information, call Luc C. Pamerleau at Industry Canada, Tel: 613-954-2951.

COMMUNICATIONS
            Ford Motor Co. will spend $100 million (US) on a system to link its dealers by satellite for employee training, customer service and relay of business information. The system will allow instructors at Ford headquarters to lead live video training sessions in its North American dealerships. It eventually may give dealers instant access to comprehensive information on individual customers who bring in their cars for repairs. Ford will pay for installation of dishes at dealerships and equipment to send and receive data and the dealers will provide televisions and a personal computer to tie to the system.

VACATIONS
            According to the Conference Board of Canada, fewer Canadians plan vacation trips this year than in any of the previous seven years. Only 59 per cent of those surveyed said they would take a trip this summer, down from 68 per cent last year and 70 per cent in 1990. Despite an improving economy, Canadians are still holding back on travel spending. Instead, they are putting their money into cars, appliances and furniture.  

THE FUTURE
            A study of 2,500 U.S. facilities managers showed what they expect workers will find in offices in ten years:
* Almost three-quarters will have on-site fitness centres.
* About 40 per cent will have day-care.
* 95 per cent will have increased security.
* More than 76 per cent will have voice mail.
* 16 per cent will have individual temperature controls in workspaces.     

PERMITS
            The United States has recorded imports of 366,700 tonnes more wheat and barley than Canada has officially exported during the first eight months of the crop year. It represents about 16 per cent of legal exports of more than  2.2 million tonnes. Record sales into the U.S. market this year have touched off a trade feud between the two countries, with promises of import restrictions unless Canada voluntarily cuts back. Farmers are required to obtain export permits for any wheat or barley heading south. The RCMP are looking into a variety of methods that may have been used to get grain over the border including not stopping at Customs and altering export permits.

ABSENTEEISM
            Sickness-benefit programs in Sweden used to pay workers 100 per cent of their salary for their first 180 days of sickness, resulting in the highest absentee rate in the Western world. (The average Swede missed 26 days of work per year and the problem was particularly acute on Mondays.) The government addressed the problem by eliminating pay for the first day of sick leave. Before this change, car-maker Volvo had to schedule 20 per cent more workers than it needed to ensure a full production crew. After the change, Volvo and other firms found absenteeism down by 25 per cent.

CAR BUYERS
            On some of Detroit's high profile new car launches, Canadians are getting much better prices--on a dollar exchange basis--than American buyers. Canadian auto companies say this is because competition for sales north of the border is much tougher these days. Canadians have less disposable income to spend on new vehicles, taxes are higher, and the economic recovery is slower. For example, a Ford Contour will sell south of the border for $14,655 (U.S.). Ford Canada's domestic price is $16,895 (Can). At the current rate of exchange, the U.S. price converted to Canadian dollars would be more than $20,000.             Not surprisingly, some Americans are trying to take advantage of their buying power in Canada but domestic new car dealers are prohibited from selling to U.S. customers under franchise agreements. The auto makers say there are other good reasons for restricting such sales. One is that vehicles made for the U.S. and Canadian markets are slightly different. Canadian cars, for example, must have daytime running lights and metric speedometers and other gauges.  

WOMEN
            According to a survey of 5,000 managers by the British Institute of Management, many managers believe "female" skills such as teamworking, consensus management and negotiating will become more valuable for businesses to succeed in the next century. Male bosses will have to learn these skills or become obsolete. But surveys show British women are still far behind in terms of pay and prospects for promotion. Only 9 per cent of managers and three per cent of senior managers in British companies are women.

U.S. GOVERNMENT PROCUREMENT
            A new information kit is now available to Canadian businesses and professional services wishing to sell to the $180 billion U.S. federal government procurement market. "Selling to the U.S. Federal Government: Non-defense Products and Services" consists of 23 fact sheets providing a comprehensive introduction on how to do business with the U.S. federal government. Produced by Foreign Affairs and International Trade in conjunction with the Canadian Embassy in Washington D.C., it reflects new opportunities available to Canadian suppliers under the NAFTA. The kit is available free from International Trade's InfoCentre in Ottawa, Fax 613-996-9709. Quote publication code #159UA.

RETAIL
            Another retail giant is planning to move north. Sportmart Inc, is a fast-growing chain of sports goods superstores based in Illinois and expects to open in Toronto early in 1995. This retailer was founded in 1971 and has 45 superstores and 3,800 employees. Typically, each Sportsmart has a broad and deep selection of name-brand products, with 65,000 items for sale. For example, 600 types of running shoes, 100 kinds of tennis rackets and 70 varieties of sleeping bags. An average store is around 4,000 square metres and sells no seconds or irregular merchandise. The company is also scouting for real estate in Ottawa and Vancouver although it may run into problems in B.C. where Sport Mart Discount Superstores Inc is an established Kamloops-based chain with 12 outlets in B.C. and Alberta.

JOBS
            Traditionally, B.C. employment growth is led by the service sector with the goods-producing sector usually trailing. But job statistics for June show that, year-to year, the goods sector moved to the forefront in job creation. Over the year, the goods sector added 54,000 jobs while the service sector produced 26,000. The change is attributed to growth in wood related manufacturing and construction, both of which belong to the goods sector. The number of jobs actually fell in some segments of the service sector. For example, retail sales lost 23,000 jobs, public administration 6,000 and transportation 7,000. Between June 1993 and June 1994, B.C. created 80,000 new jobs, about 40 per cent of the Canadian total. 

DEBT
            Equity magazine calculates that if every province and territory put in $442-million per month to retire the existing federal and provincial debts, at the end of 100 years the debt will not be reduced by even one cent.

ADVERTISING
            Advertising to an international market can be tricky and translations often have hilarious results. When KFC exported its "Finger Lickin Good" slogan to China, it emerged as "Eat your Fingers Off". Similarly, Pepsi didn't have much luck trying to get them to guzzle their cola. "Come Alive With The Pepsi Generation" ended up as "Pepsi Will Bring Your Ancestors Back From The Dead". Coors Beer lost its fizz in Spain when their hip phrase "Turn It Loose" came out as "Drink Coors and get Diarrhoea". When Otis Engineering took part in a Moscow exhibition, "completion equipment" was translated as "equipment for orgasms". And "Body by Fisher" boasted by General Motors in Belgium came out as "Corpse by Fisher". In Spain, when GM introduced the Nova they quickly discovered the word no and va mean "doesn't go".

PAPERWORK
            Citing budget constraints, the office of the Montana governor has refused to issue paperwork proclaiming such events as National Accordion Awareness Week. So far there has been no public outcry.