It is always fun to read self
congratulatory press when quite the opposite has been true for far too
long. Of course, Canada is
benefiting immeasurably from the two decades of sound fiscal policy that
followed two decades of unsound fiscal policy and a long institutional wisdom
in regards to banking regulation. You
cannot teach every school child the rudiments of sound banking and its
historical genesis in Canada
and expect the politicians to take leave of their senses as took place in the USA .
In fact, Canada got policy right as the USA got policy
right between 1980 and 2000. The over
lap is that we got policy right between 1990 and the present. Even better we finally got lucky and the
global commodity cycle finally swung back in Canada ’s favor after been absent
since 1970. This fuels rapid growth in
heavy industry which is something we have not experienced since the North
American boom of the post war era that ended during the sixties.
We are now in a post Cold War
boom that is delivering six billion people into the modern consumer
society. Of course, all Canada ’s
resources are now in demand at prices that allow us to exploit them.
Young man, if you can not cut it
at school, get your welding ticket.
In the event, the astonishing
result has been that Canada
was also able to largely sidestep the Great US recession. In many cases that meant that wage earners
were able to jump on a plane every month or so and fly out to Alberta to work in the Oil Fields or take up
a new career in mining.
This is bruising to the Eastern
Provinces, but not nearly as awful as it could have been. Employment has recovered to previous levels
generally and on the verge of serious expansion.
So half of it was great luck and
the other half rather prescient good planning that includes the direct
government investment in the Oil Sands in the late seventies.
The best place to do business: Canada
By Joanna Pachner | Canadian Business
Online – Fri, 2 Mar, 2012 10:45 AM EST
Last month, Canada
stepped onto the world stage with an uncommon swagger. In a keynote speech at
the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, Prime Minister Stephen Harper
scolded his G7 peers for their spendthrift ways and boasted of the benefits
we've reaped from our fiscal rectitude: the best debt-to-GDP ratio, the lowest
tax rate on business investment, the world's best banking system. Combined with
our vast resource wealth and the sorry economic state of much of the developed
world, why would capital and talent go anywhere else? "Canada's choice
will be, with clarity and urgency, to seize and to master our future, to be a
model of confidence, growth and prosperity in the 21st century," he
announced.
A model of confidence—these aren't words typically applied to Canada
by the business and political elite who gather each year in this Alpine town.
But since the financial crisis, and especially following the 2010 Vancouver Olympics, we've
had a bit of strut in our step, a touch of bravado in our voice. And for good
reason. While the United States
and swaths of Europe are near bankruptcy, our
books, in comparison, look in enviable order. Steady debt reduction, reforms to
the tax and pension systems and rigorous financial regulation over the past 15
years enabled Canada
to weather the crushing downturn of 2008 better than most of the world.
Our soaring reputation extends well beyond the economy. In recent
years, polls and studies have put Canada and our cities at or near
the top of places to get an education, establish a business, raise a family and
live a long, healthy life. At least two separate surveys concluded last year
that Canada
is the nation with the top global brand right now. Authorities ranging from
Forbes magazine to Justin Bieber have called us the best country on the planet
(based on admittedly different criteria). Our pop stars and actors dominate
charts and movie marquees. Crime has been dropping for 20 years. Even the
quality of our air is exceptional, the World Health Organization reports. [More:
Oilsands in Canada: No apologies]
So things are good—but they could get much better. "Canada has a
tremendous amount of reputational capital, but it's not taking advantage of
it," says Rob Jekielek, a principal at New York—based Reputation
Institute, a research and consulting company that last fall named Canada the
country with the best reputation in the world. We have an enormous opportunity
to leverage our moment in the sun to reach greater prosperity and
clout—especially, to become a leading force in finance and education, and a true
energy superpower. Laurence C. Smith, a UCLA earth sciences professor and
author of The World in 2050, a 2010 book that examines how demographics,
natural resources, globalization and climate change will transfer economic
might to the north, says, "In Canada in particular, all four factors line
up very powerfully."
Dominic Barton, a Canadian who leads the international consulting firm
McKinsey & Co.—and is often in the room during top-level discussions of
economic strategy—has watched the country's influence soar. "Canada is more
on the agenda and part of the vocabulary," he reports, with our economy
studied at conferences, and British, French and other governments actively
borrowing from Canadian policies. Our top two financial overseers enjoy
unprecedented prestige, with Bank of Canada governor Mark Carney now charged
with reforming global finance as chair of the Financial Stability Board, and
Finance Minister Jim Flaherty sought after in international forums as a
seasoned voice of pragmatism. "He's like Columbo. He kind of
shuffles," says Barton of Flaherty. "But when he talks, the pens
drop."
It's not just power brokers who are revising their views of Canada .
The long-bemoaned outflow of our talent to better opportunities
abroad—especially south of the border—appears to be reversing. According to
Immigration Canada ,
the number of American temporary residents in this country grew by almost 15%
in 2009, and applications for work visas doubled between 2008 and 2010, hitting
a record in 2010. What's more, a recent poll by Angus Reid found that almost
half of British respondents would prefer to raise their families in Canada .
Such surveys reflect a starkly different mood in the three nations.
Almost nine out of 10 Canadians think this is the best country in the world,
and 42% believe our best days lie ahead, Angus Reid found. "We see a level
of economic satisfaction that's insanely higher in Canada
than in the U.S. and U.K. ,"
says Mario Canseco, an Angus Reid vice-president—60% here, compared to
mid-teens in the other two countries. [More:
Putting Canada's economy first]
That sense of prosperity is founded not just on labour market or GDP
statistics, but on the average person's standard of living. Over the past
decade, our middle class has been steadily gaining on the Americans, and today
it is significantly richer. According to the 2011 Credit Suisse Global Wealth
Report, the median Canadian's net worth is now US$89,014—almost 70% higher than
the equivalent Yank's. All of which goes a long way to explaining why the
Occupy movement fizzled here. As John Manley, president of the Canadian Council
of Chief Executives and former deputy prime minister, noted in a speech last
fall on "Canada's Decade of Opportunity," much of what the protesters
fought for—from higher taxes on the rich to more jobs to reining in of
banks—has already been achieved here.
For New Yorker Hunter Tura, Canada 's biggest draw was simply
our superior quality of life. So in 2010, he took the job of president and CEO
of Bruce Mau Design, a multidisciplinary design firm in Toronto , and moved his family north. "I
could live anywhere in the world and do what I do. But I choose to live
here," he says, pointing to everything from good schools to safe
neighbourhoods to best-in-class airports. Tura, who describes himself as
"a proud American, but a Canadian nationalist," puts Toronto
and Vancouver
among what he calls 21st-century cities. "When I'm in Doha
or Beijing or Riyadh , these places have intensity and a
future-oriented worldview. When I'm in New York
or Chicago , I
don't feel the same optimism."
Consider, then: at a time when most of our peers are struggling, we're
a prosperous society luring talent from around the globe and sitting on an
unparalleled diversity of natural resources. Management profs talk about
inflection points: moments in the evolution of an industry or an organization
when a dramatic change can occur. This seems like such a moment for Canada , a
unique opportunity to turbo-charge our growth. "We're entering a
country-competition world," Barton says, where entire nations rather than
individual companies are crafting strategies for economic dominance. So how do
we harness our shiny brand to catapult us into a richer, more powerful future?
Manik Talwani sums up Canada 's
potential to become an economic giant in two words: energy resources. The
geophysicist at Rice University in Houston
estimates we have the second-largest deposits of crude oil in the world—as much
as 2.5 trillion barrels of bitumen buried in the oilsands of Alberta . Unfortunately, our oil is tougher
to get out of the ground, more expensive to refine and ecologically more
harmful to process than the reservoirs of the Middle East .
Yet as production there declines—Saudi Arabia is pumping out its oil at more
than four times the rate of the oilsands, Talwani noted in a New York
Times op-ed titled, "Canada: the next oil superpower?"—the
incentive to tap hard-to-reach reserves will grow. [More:
Companies we love]
Another vast storehouse lies in the Arctic .
"The north of Canada
is very, very favourable [to oil and gas deposits], in geologic
conditions," says Talwani, "but you have to do a lot of work to find
out what the reserves are." A 2008 U.S. geological survey pegged oil
reserves north of the Arctic Circle at 90 billion barrels—or 13% of the
projected undiscovered oil in the world—and 44 billion barrels of natural gas
liquids. All this will become increasingly accessible if global warming melts the
polar ice, a phenomenon already transforming northern communities. When UCLA's
Smith travelled to the Arctic to document the
effects of climate change, locals would "sigh and oblige me, but then say,
'There's also this oil plant going up behind me,' or, 'All these Filipino
immigrants are pouring in.'"
Over the coming decades, Smith expects an influx of immigrants into the
north, drawn by a milder climate and jobs in the resource sector, helping to
deliver "an unprecedented economic jolt" to countries like Canada,
Russia and Scandinavian nations. But while global warming will help unlock
natural reserves, it will actually make conventional access more difficult, he
says. Within a decade, ice roads to northern mines will increasingly become
impassable mud ruts, making shipping a preferable option. For Canada 's north, "I would
really be looking to migrate to a maritime infrastructure rather than
land-based," he says.
Oil is just one of our commodities set to rise in value as the world
population balloons. Natural gas, of which we're the second-largest exporter
today, as well as copper and nickel from northern Ontario ,
and potash and uranium from Saskatchewan ,
will see steady demand. Much of the future market for these resources will lie
in developing nations, but Canada
lags comparable powers (notably Australia )
in developing trade in fast-growing Asia .
Former prime minister Paul Martin, who consults with the International Monetary
Fund and other organizations, says that Ottawa
is "making token efforts in Latin America, and effectively walking away
from Asia and Africa . We're regarded as
somewhat self-satisfied and not very aggressive in seeking to develop new
markets." Yet in countries like China , ruled by powerful regimes,
companies need strong diplomatic ties. "Government presence is an
imprimatur for the private sector," says Martin. [More:
Game theory and pipeline]
The Harper administration has signalled a renewed effort to smooth what
had been rocky relations with China .
Harper's February visit to that country was in part aimed at forging trade
links with the next generation of Chinese leaders. Canada is also back at the
negotiating table to join the Trans-Pacific Partnership, a proposed free-trade
zone among Asian-Pacific nations, and a trade deal with the eurozone is said to
be close to completion. The best part is, by becoming less reliant on our
southern neighbour, numerous observers argue, we won't be as exposed to
regional downturns as we tap more and more of the wealth contained in our vast
territories.
There's much more to Canada
than commodities though. Michael Porter, a professor at Harvard Business School
who specializes in regional economic strategies, also sees massive unexploited
potential in Ontario 's
financial sector. In a 2008 study, he concluded that focusing on certain
services—specifically life insurance and the financing of natural resource
ventures—could lead to significant development. "Just as financial
institutions in California
were at the forefront of the development of oenological financial
products," he writes, "so should the Canadian financial sector
develop specialty products designed for the country's energy and natural resources
industries."
Since Porter's study, our financial reputation has only gotten better
and better. The World Economic Forum has named our banking system the best in
the world four years running. While Wall Street is slashing jobs, Canadian
banks reached record global employment last year. Michael Bryant, a visiting
professor at York University's Osgoode Hall Law School and former Ontario
attorney-general and minister of economic development, argues this is the ideal
time to focus rigorously—"ruthlessly, even"—on promoting our
financial industry. "It's a rare moment in global economic history that
people are looking at Canada
not for its charm but its expertise," he says. "And momentum matters
in everything." The Ontario
government, for example, should be fostering finance-related post-secondary
programs and trying to attract immigrants with specialized financial skills, he
says.
Like Porter, Bryant urges a strategy of "picking winners and
focusing on those winners" rather than spreading subsidies and tax breaks
evenly around the economy. For Toronto to become
a global financial capital "would require the growth of a few areas that
haven't already been captured by New York and London ," he says.
But we have to act now: the window of opportunity won't last. Cities like Dubai and Singapore
are already aggressively competing to become global centres of finance.
Canadian financial institutions also need to venture further beyond the
security of their small and sheltered domestic market. "True
sophistication will only come if financial firms have the courage to…compete
internationally," Porter says. With the strong loonie and many leading
banks weakened, Canadians are well positioned to do that today. TD and BMO have
been picking up assets in the U.S., while Scotiabank, already the largest
financial institution in the Caribbean, recently bought a Colombian bank. Our
pension funds have also been raising their profiles—and their spending—on the
world stage, convening meetings with sovereign wealth funds and pouncing on
choice assets in depressed economies. [More:
Oil pipeline rejections not hurting oilsands investment]
Xavier Mieles Grunauer, who was raised in Toronto and spent his career
in banking all around the planet, can attest to the high global reputation of Canada 's
financial talent. When he lived in Hong Kong ,
he recalls, "most of my colleagues had degrees from Canadian universities,
and were quite proud of these. Canada 's
reputation in the LKF district [a bar and club cluster in central Hong Kong ] is quite high." (Mieles Grunauer, seeking
to settle his young family, is now moving back to Toronto
from Sydney .)
Our educational institutions are another area of strength that remains
underused. Some Canadian universities, including Toronto 's
York and the University of British
Columbia , have been aggressive in tapping foreign
markets, but it's a scattered effort by individual institutions. Yet the
potential is vast: for Australia ,
education is now the third-largest export.
A major benefit of selling higher education is that students often stay
and build businesses. University-linked research hubs can develop into
industrial clusters, "but they have to be world-class, concentrated and
cross-sector," says McKinsey's Barton, meaning geographically focused but
spanning different disciplines' contributions to a single industry. The University of Waterloo is starting to see such a
cluster form in computer science. "I don't know why we don't scale that in
a big way, by getting 25% of the best physics and high-tech PhDs there,"
says Barton. Clean tech is another natural niche, especially for Calgary . Targeting ways
to make oilpatch resources greener would help transform the negative
perceptions of our energy while drawing talent and money from across the world.
Aside from being a safe economic harbour, Canada has another, lesser-known
asset to offer global businesses: a low-tax environment. While the U.S. continues to be viewed as a generous
jurisdiction for corporations, in fact, it now has the highest corporate tax
rate among major developed nations, eclipsing Japan last year. Canada , that bleeding-heart welfare
state? Its rate is among the lowest. The combined federal and provincial taxes
on corporations now average 25%, down from 43% at the start of the last decade.
This drop was the prime reason why last year Canada shot to the top
of Forbes's rankings of best countries for business.
That's why this is a great time to court expansion-minded global
titans, especially Asian ones, to bring their North American headquarters here
rather than the U.S. "Why should they go to New Jersey?" asks Barton.
"Vancouver
just stands out. People love living there." But our governments need to
make the case, as the Dutch and the Swiss recently did by sending delegations
to Asian capitals to promote their cities as European hubs. What should greatly
help our pitch is that being based in Canada is now much more
prestigious. One CEO of a Toronto-based multinational used to hand out his New York business card
while travelling. No more; in fact, his New
York colleagues now use their Canadian cards.
Of course, self-promotion has never come easily to Canadians. As Peter
C. Newman once put it, we aspire to be Clark
Kent, not Superman. Which is partly why we sometimes fail to appreciate how
highly this country is esteemed. Tura recalls that at the end of the interviews
for his job at Bruce Mau Design, he was asked, somewhat sheepishly, "What
do you think of Toronto ?"—as
if a New Yorker would find the city an uninspiring burg. He thinks the influx
of Americans like him, with their more blustery edge, will add a useful
ingredient to the earnest, cautious business culture here. "Maybe it takes
an American to see what's at stake," he says. "In 10 years, Toronto is going to be a
global design capital. People who work here are that good. I bring some
perspective to say, this is what's possible."
Admittedly, there are several threats to Canada 's manifest destiny, starting
with stratospheric household debt—already the second-highest among the G7 and
rising. Our environmental reputation has also taken a pounding from the
oilsands' dirty image and the withdrawal from the Kyoto Protocol. Still, many larger, richer
countries can only wish they had our problems. Our cities regularly top lists
of the best places to live and, according to Richard Florida, an influential
American academic (who himself moved to Toronto to run an urban prosperity
think-tank at the Rotman School of Management), they're set to become leading
centres of growth due to their cultural tolerance and creativity.
For Jihad Abdul-Rahiim, a Toyota
engineer who moved to the Toronto suburb of Mississauga in 2010, this
diversity is a major draw. "In New
York , after a generation, everyone is American. Here,
I go out shopping and people are the same as in their home country." He
now finds himself the object of envy. "I get a lot of jealousy from family
and friends due to things like health care."
Unlike the nationalism of more culturally monolithic nations that tends
to exclude foreign-born citizens, in Canada it's immigrants like Abdul-Rahiim
and Tura—people who live here by choice, not happenstance—who tend to be the biggest
patriots. They have a context for comparison, and an appreciation of our
potential. For instance, during his travels around the Arctic, Smith found Canada
consistently rose above its northern peers in everything from economic growth
to aboriginal rights. "I would never suggest that Canada will become a military superpower like
the U.S. and China ," he
says. But based on quality of life and future prospects, "it's a great
time to be a Canadian."
A significant benefit of promoting college is that learners often stay and develop business.
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