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The Economic ReMaking of Canada:

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Renewed reliance on primary resource production and export ... Rolling econometric regressions may give credence to argument that high-90s is 'fair value' ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Economic ReMaking of Canada:


1
The Economic Re-Makingof Canada
  • Implications for Air Travel
  • and for the Country!

Presentation by Jim Stanford CAW Economist To
NavCanada Labour-Management Committee January 2008
2
The Economic Remakingof Canada
  • Renewed reliance on primary resource production
    and export
  • Consequent relative and absolute decline in other
    tradeable industries
  • Resource boom drives strong overall conditions
  • resource investment - supply chain
  • labour incomes - spin-off effects
  • But for how long???
  • Resource dependence raises troubling questions
  • nature and sustainability of growth
  • Canadas role in the global economy
  • Implications for air travel

3
HOLLOWING OUTDifferent Concepts
  • Most common conception
  • Foreign takeovers of Canadian businesses
  • Loss of head offices associated functions
  • Loss of capacity for economic leadership
    (innovation, finance)

4
HOLLOWING OUT
5
HOLLOWING OUTDifferent Concepts
  • Most common conception
  • Foreign takeovers of Canadian businesses
  • Loss of head offices associated functions
  • Loss of capacity for economic leadership
    (innovation, finance)
  • A different but related conception
  • Structural regression in our economic makeup
  • Hewer of wood, drawer of water

Your Logogoes here
6
REGRESSION OF CANADAS EXPORTS
1999 57
2007 43
7
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8
Composition of Growth
9
REGRESSION OF BUSINESS INVESTMENT
1960-99 125
2000-07 87
10
Consequences of the Remaking
  • Strong growth in resource industries
  • Contraction in other tradeable industries
  • Rising dollar
  • Terms of trade gains
  • Rising profit share, falling wage share
  • Strong nominal income conditions
  • Regional economic shifts
  • Strains on fiscal federalism
  • Environmental, geopolitical issues

11
Shrinking Wage Share
Labour Income as Share of GDP
12
Growing Profit Share
Before-Tax Corporate Profits as Share of GDP
13
Two Sides of the Street
Redistribution of GDP Since 1999
14
Tradition of CanadianPolitical-Economy
  • Harold Innis, 1930s-1960s
  • Identified structural resource-dependence of
    Canadian economy
  • Staples theory
  • Successive waves of development drive and shape
    our economy
  • Fish - Furs - Timber - Agriculture
  • Minerals - Energy
  • Not without benefits, but assigns Canada a
    stunted role in world economy

15
Drawbacks of Resource Dependence
  • Tendency of real commodity prices to fall over
    long-term
  • Instability in prices, volumes
  • Risky basket to put eggs in
  • Tendency of resources to run out, become obsolete
  • Environmental / geopolitical risks
  • Loss of high-value high-productivity jobs
    associated with secondary tertiary activities
  • Eg. exporting raw bitumen vs. refined products

16
The Dollars Unique Strength
  • Loonie has appreciated much more than any other
    major U.S. trading partner
  • Extra rise of the loonie (relative to U.S.
    trade-weighted index) accounts for most of its
    appreciation
  • Canada (along with Mexico) is uniquely dependent
    on exports to the U.S.

17
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21
Where Should the Loonie Be?
  • Governor Dodge December 6, Senate Banking Trade
    Commerce Committee
  • "Now 98 cents sounds very specific. I don't
    intend it to be nearly that specific but
    something in the mid- to upper 90s seemed to be
    pretty consistent with that."
  • Implication Loonie in high-90s is somehow
    logical.

22
What is the Loonies Fair Value?
  • Rolling econometric regressions may give credence
    to argument that high-90s is fair value
  • Simply because the apparent importance of the oil
    price coefficient gets larger
  • But does that imply that this is a sensible,
    sustainable, equilibrium level???
  • Other benchmarks
  • Purchasing power parity still low 80s, rising?
  • Unit cost competitiveness low 70s, falling

23
Auto Labour Costs
  • Canada U.S.
  • Hourly wage, 25 21
  • Auto parts
  • Hourly wage, 32 26
  • Assembly
  • Implied exchange rate 82-84 cents
  • Canadian productivity advantage in assembly
    helps, but not enough
  • UAW

24
Possible Transmission Mechanisms
  • Real trade surplus?
  • Real inflow of FDI?
  • Corporate profitability?
  • Equity valuations?
  • Foreign takeovers?

Real Mechanisms

Financial Mechanisms
25
CHAIN OF CAUSATION
High Market Valuations
Foreign Takeovers
High Resource Profits
Resource Investmt. Boom
High Resource Prices
Higher Interest Rates
Higher Dollar
Shrinking Non-Resource Export Industries
26
How to Bring the LoonieBack to Earth
  • Other countries manage currencies, we can too
  • Cut interest rates
  • Change monetary policy direction
  • Mess up the resource/investment boom
  • Taxes
  • Approvals / environmental rules
  • Foreign investment review
  • Appoint Jim Stanford Finance Minister

27
A Broader Vision
  • True prosperity must be based on more than whats
    buried beneath our feet
  • Use resource wealth carefully and deliberately to
    foster more well-rounded form of economic growth
  • Slow down resource boom
  • Capture more rents from resources
  • Pro-actively foster other high-value tradeable
    industries
  • Manage global interactions
  • Share the wealth
  • Labour income - Public services

28
Is Canada Reallyas Rich as We Look?
  • November StatsCan study hits front pages
  • In three years, real income levels have returned
    to the levels of the mid-1980s.
  • Out-performing U.S. for 1st time in decades
  • Per capita up 16 since 2002
  • Caution real national income is a funny duck
  • Includes terms of trade gains, profits on FDI
  • By conventional measures (real GDP per capita),
    we still lag the U.S. despite their many
    problems
  • Canadas productivity performance still poor
  • Real compensation per worker up 6 since 2002

29
What Does it Mean for Air Travel?
PS NavCan is NOT an Airline!
  • High incomes ? strong consumer spending, consumer
    travel
  • Very high profits ? strong business travel
  • Regional shifts in destinations
  • Resource destinations in Canada (Nfld, N.Alta.)
  • Global links?
  • Growing travel deficit
  • Dollar - Income levels
  • Dollar mutes fuel price impact on domestic
    carriers
  • Structural condition of Canadian airlines still
    weak

30
International Travel
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