Wednesday, February 01, 1995

FEBRUARY 1995 Economic Digest - Importing and Exporting



FEBRUARY 1995 Edition

CROSS-BORDER SHOPPING
            With the Canadian dollar at its lowest point in nine years, the incentive to shop south of the border has been removed and the reverse is now occurring. From January through November of 1994, same-day car trips, considered an indicator of cross-border shopping, plunged 23.1 per cent from the same period in 1993 according to Statistics Canada. And trips of one or more nights are down 17.3 per cent. Meanwhile, same-day trips from the U.S. rose 7.9 per cent. The trend has already taken its toll on some retailers. Some stores in Niagara Falls, N.Y., have seen a 33 per cent drop in Canadian customers and the percentage of B.C. cars in the parking lot of Bellis Fair Mall, in Bellingham, Wash., has dropped to 35 per cent from 40 per cent. Many U.S. shopping centres, built just south of the border to take advantage of the boom in Canadian shoppers of a couple of years ago when the dollar was soaring, are now suffering from a severe lack of traffic.

DIET
            Since 1972, agricultural analysts at Statistics Canada have been recording the import, production and supplies of basic foods and by dividing everything by population size they arrive at "apparent per capita" consumption patterns. Bananas are big on the list, an average of 13.4K per person annually. Lettuce, and carrots remain favourites as are pork and beef. But patterns have changed since 1972. Certain dairy products have declined steadily over the past 20 years. Whole milk has plummeted while 2 per cent milk has climbed. Chicken has gained in popularity year by year while red meat has dropped slowly. Peppers and cucumber have become especially popular. Butter, three kilograms per capita in 1993, is now making a slight comeback against margarine at 5.4K per person. Ale and beer  consumption was 68 litres in 1993. Milk was 51 litres for 2 per cent, 10 litres for 1 per cent and six litres for skim. 

SUPPORT
            People who have studied the Mexican market agree the most effective way to explore opportunities in Mexico is through a personal visit. A new federal government program called NewMex (New Exporters to Mexico) provides support for Canadians who want to participate in missions to Mexico. Participants travel to major Mexican cities to learn first-hand how to do business there. External Affairs and International Trade have more than 30 sector-specific studies available for the Mexican market. Information on NewMex can be obtained by calling John Wiebe in Vancouver at 666-1436. International Trade has Centres in 11 Canadian cities and a network of trade commissioners abroad. A guide called Trade Development Programs and Services is available by calling 1-800-267-8376. The Canadian International Development Agency (CIDA) operates an Industrial Co-operation program (INC) that uses financial incentives to mobilize private-sector resources for development, including direct technical co-operation and feasibility studies. For more information call 819-997-7775.

PUBLICATIONS
            The Royal Bank has introduced a newsletter entitled Trade Talk aimed at Canadian businesses seeking international importing and exporting opportunities. It provides an economic digest of specific regions as well as information on the bank's products and services designed to assist companies in their trade activities. The inaugural issue deals with Latin America and presents information on Brazil, Mexico and Argentina. Trade Talk will be issued quarterly and is available by calling 800-263-9191 or from the bank's International Trade Centre in Vancouver at 665-5108.
           
PRINTING
            Last year, Canada's printing industry was understandably upset when the 1994 contract to print about 45 per cent of Canadian stamps was awarded to an Australian printing company. The printing of stamps is a complex, and high cost undertaking involving strict security systems and expensive finishing equipment. At the root of the problem was the unwillingness of Canada Post to award contracts other than on a year by year basis. Helped by a major lobbying effort by the printing industry, Canada Post has now amended its procedures and awarded a $24.1 million contract to a Toronto firm which will guarantee that the printing of stamps stays in Canada in the future. The company will hire up to 125 employees and invest $4 million in equipment. The contract is for three years with two one-year options and involves the printing of around four billion commemorative and definitive stamps during the period. Equipment manufacturers and suppliers will also cash in on the contract. This is welcome news for the Canadian printing industry which, after being pounded by the recession, is now showing signs of recovery.       

TRENDS
            Despite four visits in three years by the Premier, trade with the Asia-Pacific region is going downhill. At the same time, provincial exports to the U.S. have been growing even faster than the share of Asia trade has been dropping, due to free-trade and the declining Canadian dollar. Diversification of the provincial economy is considered critical as a hedge against an over-reliance on the U.S. economy.
            In 1990, Pacific Rim countries took 38 per cent of the value of B.C. exports and about 41 per cent went to the U.S. By the end of last year, exports to the U.S had climbed to 55 per cent of total exports and the Pacific Rim share was down to 34 per cent. Despite trade missions, the B.C. presence in the Asia Pacific region has not substantially broadened and Japan takes a 71 per cent share of exports and this single-market concentration has locked B.C. into the problems of Japan's economy while other Asia markets are booming. The share of the value of B.C. exports to Europe has dropped to 8 per cent from 16 per cent and there have been smaller drops in exports to Latin America. The good news is that the value of B.C.'s exports has grown 25 per cent between 1991 and 1993.

INVESTMENT
            One of the biggest worries Canada had with the advent of free trade was that Canadian firms would head south to where wages and taxes are lower, unions weaker and winters milder, and many have done so. However, when it comes to long term investment, Canada still has the edge. Philips, the Dutch electrical-products group, decided last fall to move two light-bulb production lines from Mexico to London, Ontario. Chrysler is setting up a research unit in Windsor, Ontario. Toyota is spending more than C$600 million to more than double the capacity of its Corolla assembly line near Cambridge, Ontario, to 200,000 cars a year. All the extra cars will be exported to the U.S. Two Swedish firms, in pharmaceuticals and telephone equipment, have chosen Montreal as the site for large research facilities with international mandates. One will have more than 600 employees. These firms have discovered that the lure of low wages in the southern U.S. and Mexico can be outweighed by the productivity of a loyal, well-educated--albeit highly paid--workforce. Free trade has helped make Canada a more attractive place in which to invest. Lower tariffs on goods sent south from Canadian factories are one reason. Another is that competition from Mexico and the U.S. has  spurred Canadian firms to improve productivity, mainly by investing in plant and machinery.

RETAIL
            The stronger economy has resulted in a record number of new products making their way on to the shelves of North American supermarkets. Grocery, drug and other stores launched a record 21,986 products in 1994, a healthy 26.6 per cent surge from the 17,363 new products reported for 1993. New foods, beverages and health and beauty aids topped the list. Some products were not really new but "line extensions." Baking soda was added to a lot of cleaning products and alpha hydroxy acid was added to creams as a regenerating agent.
            An industry study has found that the average price of items in Canadian supermarkets is 10 per cent lower than products in the U.S.--an average price of $1.88 in Canada and $2.09 south of the border. The disparity exists even though some Canadian goods, such as milk and eggs, are priced higher than they should be because of the country's supply management system. Canadian grocers and wholesalers fared well in their sales growth in 1993 compared with those in the U.S. reporting a sales increase of 7.6 per cent over the previous year which is double the U.S. growth. Yet, average weekly sales for U.S. supermarkets was $332,475, 68 per cent higher that the $198,268 in Canada. Total Canadian food sales were $1.1 billion in 1993.

MARKET INTELLIGENCE
            Timely, relevant, product and industry specific market information is now available within Canada on a new service through Industry Canada's Market Intelligence Service. Using the Harmonized Commodity (HS) and Standard Industrial Classification (SIC), the service provides Canadian and U.S. micro-trade information to Canadian entrepreneurs, manufacturers and investors.     A Canadian company can use the service to increase business awareness for new product development and production; increase domestic and foreign market share; identify new markets and buyers. Data sources include Statistics Canada, Revenue Canada and the U.S. Department of Commerce and the data are updated quarterly and annually. For more information contact the Strategic Information Branch, Industry Canada, Tel: 613-954-4970, Fax: 613-954-2340.

COMPACT DISCS
            Cassette tapes are on their way out according to the industry. CDs gained about a 65 per cent market share over the Christmas season compared to 35 per cent for tapes. In 1992-93 CD sales totalled 45.3 million compared with 38.5 million tapes and 300,000 vinyl albums. CDs sales will increase even more as new cars are equipped with CD players rather than tape decks. Three out of four Canadian households had tape players last year compared to one out of three with a CD player.             The pirating of CDs is one of the major irritants in the copyright piracy issue that might see the U.S. impose trade curbs on up to $800 million worth of Chinese exports from toys to textiles and possibly shoes and electrical goods. CDs that cost $22.00 in the U.S are sold on street corners in China for as little as $2.00. 
            U.S. trade authorities have identified as many as 29 factories scattered throughout South China's special economic zones churning out an estimated 75 million bootleg CDs every year. Only about 5 per cent are sold in China, the rest are smuggled to Hong Kong and other parts of South-east Asia and some have even turned up in Western Canada. So far, Chinese authorities have been unable, or unwilling, to shut down these factories. In fact, since the U.S. authorities first raised the issue 18 months ago, the number of illegal CD factories has nearly doubled.

EURO-BUREAUCRACY
            The New Year saw a spate of new EC regulations come into effect to protect its citizens! Among the highlights: Abnormal curvature of bananas is forbidden nor can they be less than 5 1\2 inches long (British tabloids have opened up banana hot-lines so that readers can turn in stores selling bent or short bananas); Carrots are fruit (so that Portugal's carrot jam can continue to be sold); The land snail, favoured in French restaurants as escargot, is a fish, this enables French snail farmers to claim fish-farm subsidies; Young persons aged 15-18 are "adolescents" if they have left school, but "children" if they have not; Quail are not poultry; It will be illegal to ski on snow less than eight inches deep; Curvaceous cucumbers are not permitted; Restaurants serving cheese and celery sandwiches must have separate boards to carve the cheese and celery; Cattle are required to have double eartags engraved with a 14-digit number to identify them and have individual passports which must accompany them wherever they go, but the number on the passport is different from the eartag number; British foresters are up in arms over a ban on using the hearty English oak for furniture making because it is too "bendy"; Next year should see the introduction of standards for a Euro-Santa and Christmas trees.