Monday, April 01, 1996

APRIL 1996 Economic Digest - Importing and Exporting


APRIL 1996 Edition



EXPORTS
            In 1995, Canada's exports to the U.S, our major trading partner, increased 13 per cent to $202 billion. Recent figures show that sales to the rest of the world increased 29 per cent to $52 billion. Exports to Europe rose 42 per cent and sales to countries that are not part of the 25-member club of big industrialized nations increased 31 per cent. This indicates that Canadian companies have become competitive enough to finally begin penetrating the tougher foreign markets that lie beyond the U.S. and that the painful restructuring that preoccupied Canadian companies in the early 1990s is paying off. In the final three months of the year, Canada ran its first quarterly trade surplus with countries other than the U.S. since 1985. The trade deficit with those countries in 1994 was over $11 billion.

INFORMATION
            United States travel information offices in Toronto, Montreal and Vancouver are in the process of closing down as the U.S. Travel and Tourism Administration prepares to go out of business. The U.S. Congress refused to allocate $12 million to keep the agency operating until an industry-sponsored group could be formed to take over the tasks. The move makes the U.S. the only industrialized country in the world without a government-run office to promote tourism.

FORESTRY
            The B.C. Premier wants the forest industry to create 21,000 more jobs in the province over the next five years. If they don't, the government will move unilaterally to tie the companies' access to trees to the employment they create. The B.C. industry has generated 15,000 additional jobs over the past five years bringing the total to 107,000. However, it still employs fewer people--1.4 jobs for each 1,000 cubic metres of wood harvested--than its competitors in other areas. Employment rates range from about 1.5 jobs for each 1,000 cubic metres in Sweden to more than six in California where more manufacturing is done.

CULTURE
            Hundreds of thousands of Canadians could become "electronic Americans" because of a ruling by the Canadian Radio-Television  and Telecommunications Commission making it expensive to set up Canadian satellite TV services. An estimated 200,000 Canadian households already supply fake addresses in order to receive signals from such U.S. satellite services as DirectTV. They receive up to 150 channels on tiny RCA satellite dishes. The illicit trade draws about $100 million a year out of the Canadian broadcasting system.

TV TUBES
            Japan's Mitsubishi Corp. is closing Canada's only television tube factory--throwing 575 people out of work. The Ontario plant has been battered recently by increased competition, mainly from South Korea. Mitsubishi bought the plant in 1983 for $20 million after RCA Inc. abandoned it. They spent more than $100 million modernizing the operation, and was also given $15 million in federal and provincial loans. For a few years, the plant turned regular profits and generated about $160 million in annual sales from the production of about one million cathode ray tubes a year, most of which were sold to U.S. based television makers.

FASHION
            In the 1980s, Chinese citizens gained access to "status goods" such as television sets, stereos and washing machines, now they are stepping into French fashions. China is anxious to project a new, positive image of itself so the government has asked Pierre Cardin to design uniforms for its public servants, including soldiers, and railway, airline and post office workers.

SPORTS
            When the world figure-skating championships were awarded to Edmonton, Alberta, tickets for the 16,000 seat Edmonton Coliseum sold out in 42 hours a year ago. During the nine days of the championships, an estimated $50 million was infused into the coffers of Edmonton businesses and the organizers realized a profit of over $5 million of which $750,000 will be funnelled into figure-skating clubs in Alberta.

CUBA
            According to a study by Colby College in Maine, the last time U.S. politicians tried to curtail Canadian trade with Cuba with anti-Castro legislation, they were not very successful. Canadian exports to Cuba have doubled to about $274 million a year in the four years since the U.S. Congress extended its economic embargo to include Canadian subsidiaries of U.S.-parent companies. The consequence of the law was to clear the field of competition from subsidiaries so that wholly owned Canadian companies could step in and do a booming business.

EUROCRACY
            European bureaucrats have ruled that shellfish being taken to market must be given regular rest periods and be immersed in water or sprayed, to avoid injury, stress or suffering.

TRUCKING
            Trucks carry close to 70 per cent of goods moving between Canada and the U.S., despite the fact that no cabotage agreement exists regulating the operation of trucking companies in cross-border operations. Without a cabotage agreement, truckers can't cross the border and make door-to-door pickups and deliveries, or move goods either inter- or intra-state or province. Current practice calls for trucks moving to a border relay point where the rig is turned over to a driver licensed in the other country. The delays not only add to the transit time for shipments, but boost a shippers transportation costs as well.

WORLD TOURISM
            In 1995, international tourism receipts rose by seven per cent to $372 billion, according to the World Tourism Organization. The Middle East was the fastest growing region, thanks to a strong recovery of tourism in Egypt. At the other extreme, tourist receipts in the Americas stagnated, largely due to a decline in the number of Canadians and Mexicans travelling to the United States. In the developing world, the biggest tourist earners are China and Hong Kong. China's receipts have increased by an annual average of 30 per cent over the past five years. In 1995 however, South Korea's grew 50 per cent.

LAUGHTER
            It costs three per cent more to laugh this year than it did in 1995 according to the Cost of Laughing Index. Rubber chickens, thrown at hockey games, one of the components of the Index, rose to $66 a dozen from $60 a dozen last year. Other items include the newsstand price of Mad Magazine, up 28 per cent, and comedy club tickets at 10 clubs across the country which rose 1.7 per cent. The minimum price for writing a half-hour TV situation comedy rose three per cent to $11,209 from $10,883. The price of Groucho glasses, at $15 a dozen and arrows through the head, at $6 a dozen, remained the same because they don't get thrown at hockey games. The index has been compiled for 10 years.

GROWTH
            These are the benchmarks of the fastest-growing small U.S. companies according to Inc. magazine:
* Average time spent on market research before launching a company: 8.5 months.
* Percentage of founders who started with a marketing plan: 45 per cent.
* Average time to make a sale in 1990: 3.79 months.
* Average time to make a sale in 1994: 3.78 months.
* Percentage of companies that have their own sales forces: 58 per cent.
* Percentage of companies that use independent reps: 8 per cent.

THE WORKPLACE
             Employees at Maplins, a British electronics company, start every Monday with a bingo game in the cafeteria. Workers can win up to $100 depending on how many orders the company won the week before.

OWNERSHIP
            Women now own a third of U.S. businesses and have become a major force in the economy. From 1987 up to 1992, sales and receipts of women-owned companies increased 131 per cent to $643 billion (U.S.). Women-owned companies totalled 6.4 million in 1992, employed 13.2 million workers and had sales and receipts of $1.6 trillion, more than the gross domestic product of all but a few countries.

JAPANESE LAW
            Tough new consumer legislation in Japan is already having an impact on B.C.'s tourism industry. Some Vancouver hoteliers fear they will get involved in lawsuits filed in Japan--or have local payments withheld--if tours don't go exactly as planned. Claims from disgruntled travellers can be as high as 15 per cent of the cost of a package tour for complaints such as a change of itinerary, or being bumped from one hotel to another, even if the substitute hotel is of equal quality and just across the street. Even trivial complaints, such as being assigned a room with a queen or king bed instead of twins, which Japanese prefer, could result in a claim.

WINE
            The European Wine Databank in Italy has used a technique known as nuclear magnetic resonance to compile the characteristics of the continent's thousands of wines. The technology allows them to verify an individual wine right down to a particular hillside. Experts contend that 5 per cent to ten per cent of wines have been tampered with and misrepresented.

EXERCISE
            A British study of health and economic benefits of vigorous exercise shows that, below the age of 45, people who partake are costing the country's health service five times more in injuries than they save in improved health. The leader of the study, from the University of Sheffield who is under 45 and plays hockey and cricket, has had five strains, two broken fingers, a dislocated shoulder and is on his fourth set of teeth.

WATER
            Ninety-seven per cent of all water on earth is found in the oceans. Nearly 58 per cent of U.S. imports come by sea. Nearly 180 million people visited America's beaches last year. Saltwater fishing contributes nearly $15 billion a year to the U.S. Gross Domestic Product. U.S. ship construction, commercial fishing, offshore oil and natural gas production generate about $242 billion in annual revenues worldwide. And nearly 3.1 million pounds of garbage was collected from America's oceanfronts last year.   

RESERVATIONS
            U.S. restaurant owners are watching with interest an experiment launched last summer by American Express. In 35 restaurants in 20 cities, patrons who make reservations and then fail to show up are charged $10 to $25. Of 10,000 reservations made so far, there have been only seven no-shows. In a 1993 survey, many restaurants reported no-show rates of 10 to 40 per cent.

TRENDS
            Dried pig ears, America's hippest canine snack, are making dogs across the country sit up and beg. The supplier, Oink-Oink Inc. of Detroit, has introduced spinoff products such as Fresh Vanilla and Cool Mint pig ears for dogs with problem breath.

ONLY IN SWEDEN
            Research in igloos will remain part of Swedish military spending, despite plans to trim the defence budget. A military igloo can be as large as a hanger and take a direct hit from artillery without collapsing.
            On 40 occasions in 1992-94, the Swedish government heard rotational movements at up to 200 rpm in coastal waters and assumed they were submarine propellers. Researchers have since found that the noise is identical to that made by mink furiously paddling their little feet.