Skip all menus (access key: 2) Skip first menu (access key: 1)
Foreign Affairs and International Trade Canada
Foreign Affairs and International Trade Canada
Français
Home
Contact Us
Help
Search
canada.gc.ca
Canada International

Foreign Affairs and International Trade Canada

Services for Canadian Travellers

Services for Business

Canada in the World

About the Department

SPEECHES


2007  - 2006  - 2005  - 2004  - 2003  - 2002  - 2001  - 2000  - 1999  - 1998  - 1997  - 1996

<html> <head> <meta name="Generator" content="Corel WordPerfect 8"> <title>MR. PETTIGREW - ADDRESS AT THE 8TH ANNUAL CANADIAN-AMERICAN BUSINESS ACHIEVEMENT AWARD AND INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS PARTNERSHIP FORUM - TORONTO, ONTARIO</title> </head> <body text="#000000" link="#0000ff" vlink="#551a8b" alink="#ff0000" bgcolor="#c0c0c0"> <p><font face="Arial"></font><font face="Arial" size="+1"></font><font face="Arial" size="+1"><u>CHECK AGAINST DELIVERY</u></font></p> <p align="CENTER"><font face="Arial" size="+1">NOTES FOR AN ADDRESS BY</font></p> <p align="CENTER"><font face="Arial" size="+1">THE HONOURABLE PIERRE PETTIGREW,</font></p> <p align="CENTER"><font face="Arial" size="+1">MINISTER FOR INTERNATIONAL TRADE,</font></p> <p align="CENTER"><font face="Arial" size="+1">AT THE 8TH ANNUAL</font></p> <p align="CENTER"><font face="Arial" size="+1">CANADIAN-AMERICAN BUSINESS ACHIEVEMENT AWARD AND</font></p> <p align="CENTER"><font face="Arial" size="+1">INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS PARTNERSHIP FORUM</font></p> <p align="CENTER"><font face="Arial" size="+1">THE CANADA WE WANT IN THE NORTH AMERICA WE ARE BUILDING</font></p> <p><font face="Arial" size="+1">TORONTO, Ontario</font></p> <p><font face="Arial" size="+1">October 16, 2002</font></p> <p><font face="Arial">I am delighted to be here before the Canadian-American Business Council. You have done much to lay the groundwork and to encourage Canadian and U.S. firms to partner across our shared border in a spirit of innovation and cooperation. This has produced tremendous business growth and prosperity for our two countries.</font></p> <p><font face="Arial"><strong>Canada in North America</strong></font></p> <p><font face="Arial">About two weeks ago, the government set out its agenda for the coming years in the Throne Speech, entitled "The Canada We Want." For those Americans in the audience, our Throne Speech is much like your State of the Union address, when the government outlines its priorities for the year.</font></p> <p><font face="Arial">The government set out a number of ambitious goals on the economic side. We want to be "a world leader in innovation and learning, a magnet for talent and investment." And we want to "secure our place in North America and in the world, confident in who we are and where we are headed."</font></p> <p><font face="Arial">This, simply put, is my agenda. The Canada I want is a world leader and innovator, secure and able to profit from its place in the North American economic space. </font></p> <p><font face="Arial">Canada's economic prosperity is closely allied to our access to the U.S. market. And as Canada's Minister for International Trade, I can tell you that my foremost priority, day in and day out, is not just securing that access but also increasing it. </font></p> <p><font face="Arial">You all know that Canada is a trading nation. Over the last decade, Canadian exports as a proportion of total GDP have risen from 25 percent in 1991 to 43 percent last year. And much of this trade goes to the U.S. market--82 percent of our merchandise exports. </font></p> <p><font face="Arial">We are by far the largest trading partner of the United States. We buy more U.S. goods than all the EU countries combined, almost 25 percent of American exports. Thirty-eight American states have Canada as their largest market. This represents, in total, more than $1.9 billion in trade, day in day out, every day of the year. </font></p> <p><font face="Arial">So, the North American Free Trade Agreement [NAFTA] has been a tremendous success. From 1993 to 2001, Canada's merchandise exports to its NAFTA partners increased almost 95 percent; Mexican exports increased by 221 percent and U.S. exports increased by 86 percent. </font></p> <p><font face="Arial">But NAFTA has been more than a scorecard for trade. NAFTA has fundamentally changed the North American economic space. It has accelerated the pace of economic integration. The new opportunities and competitive pressures created by NAFTA have contributed significantly to the reorientation of Canada's industrial structure, as it has to those of our U.S. and Mexican partners.</font></p> <p><font face="Arial">To begin with, NAFTA has made all three partners more competitive. By strengthening the rules and procedures governing trade and investment on this continent, it has allowed trade and investment flows to skyrocket.</font></p> <p><font face="Arial">Magna, a Canadian auto supply company, has factories in Mexico; Bombardier has plants in Vermont and New York; and Hewlett Packard has major investments in Toronto. More and more, we have a North American economy. </font></p> <p><font face="Arial">So Canada's economic prosperity is tightly tied to the North American economic space. Some less confident people see this as a terrible predicament. I like it. In fact, I love it. I want more predicaments like this. I would be happy to double our market share in the U.S. This would mean more jobs and prosperity for Canadians. </font></p> <p><font face="Arial">But we are not ignoring the rest of the world. Our hemispheric agenda reaches beyond the U.S. The Free Trade Area of the Americas negotiations hold the potential to create the world's largest free trade area, with 800 million people and a combined GDP of nearly $18.5 trillion, more than one third of the world's economic activity and greater than the GDP of the European Union.</font></p> <p><font face="Arial">We are also working multilaterally to achieve greater trade liberalization and better rules governing global trade. Our success in Doha last year was an important step in a process to ensure a rules-based international trading system that fosters prosperity for developing and developed countries. </font></p> <p><font face="Arial">We intend to work with the U.S. administration, now thankfully strengthened with trade promotion authority, to promote our shared interests in trade liberalization. </font></p> <p><font face="Arial"><strong>A Strong and Competitive Economy at Home</strong></font></p> <p><font face="Arial">But we must not forget that our bread is primarily buttered at home, in Canada and in the North American economic space. </font></p> <p><font face="Arial">We must not forget that we have to be competitive in the world's toughest marketplace --North America. And, more than that, we must make ourselves a leader in North American innovation and a magnet for investment and talent.</font></p> <p><font face="Arial">We have taken hard steps over the last 10 years to do just that. We put ourselves through a period of extreme fiscal restraint in the mid-1990s with a goal of vigorously eliminating the deficit and reducing our national debt. The crucial steps we took over those years represent the reason why the government has been able to balance budgets over the last six years and to slash our debt to GDP ratio. This year, we are the only G7 country to have a balanced budget.</font></p> <p><font face="Arial">At the same time we have brought in fair and competitive taxes. We are delivering on a $100-billion tax reduction package. Canada now has one of the most competitive business tax regimes in the world. By 2005, the corporate taxation rate in Canada will be five percentage points lower than the U.S. average.</font></p> <p><font face="Arial">The hard work at home has paid off. Don't just take me at my word. In an article last week entitled "Canada's Economy Grows Where Others Falter," the <em>New York Times</em> noted that "Canada is defying the slowdown throttling much of the world economy."</font></p> <p><font face="Arial">Canada leads the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development [OECD] in job creation; the International Monetary Fund [IMF] predicts our growth rate will be the highest of all Western countries. And, we have received "Triple A" investment upgrades from Moody's and Standard &amp; Poor's. These are all indicators of a dynamic economy. </font></p> <p><font face="Arial">Canada has thus cast its lot with North American prosperity and it is paying off. We are a pivotal player in many sectors of the new economy. Canadian companies are at the forefront of new developments in biotechnology, multimedia and fuel cell technologies, to name only a few. </font></p> <p><font face="Arial">Earlier this year KPMG released the results of a study entitled <em>Competitive Alternatives: Comparing Business Costs in North America, Europe and Japan</em>. Canada was ranked the leading cost-competitive industrial country. Not surprisingly, Canada attracted $42.8&nbsp;billion of new foreign direct investment in 2001, a new record high, even more impressive in view of the marked decline in mergers and acquisitions from the year before. Two thirds of this investment was from the U.S. </font></p> <p><font face="Arial"><strong>Maintaining our Economic Security and Prosperity</strong></font></p> <p><font face="Arial">But we must not stand still. We must not be complacent. Much like the bicycle theory of trade negotiations--as soon as you stop advancing, you stumble--the same is true for our North American agenda. </font></p> <p><font face="Arial">It is in the interests of Canadians to continue fearlessly along the route of economic security and prosperity in North America. We can no longer be seized with doubts about competing or about lack of confidence or identity. We know we can compete and we know we can win. </font></p> <p><font face="Arial">Now many in the business community have been calling for a strategic or a grand bargain with the U.S. Others have called for a common market or a customs union.</font></p> <p><font face="Arial">While there is always room for a healthy debate, and I encourage it, I do not think there is currently an appetite for such a grand scheme. But that does not mean inaction. Indeed, much can be done to build on existing achievements by advancing resolutely and with determination step by step, with a clear eye on Canadian interests. </font></p> <p><font face="Arial">Let me set out six goals for the Canada I want in the North America we are building.</font></p> <p><font face="Arial">First of all, I want to increase our share of the U.S. market. Canada typically supplies about 19 percent of U.S. imports, a trade weight well above our economic weight in the world. We should aim to increase our share on a yearly basis. Let us not be fearful of our trade with the U.S.; let us magnify it.</font></p> <p><font face="Arial">Second, I want to see greater flows of two-way investment on which trade increasingly depends. Last year, as I said earlier, we had a $42-billion inflow of investment. We should seek to achieve $50 billion in investment next year. With this investment into Canada will come technology, research and development functions to help us achieve the innovation goals so strongly set out in the Speech from the Throne.</font></p> <p><font face="Arial">Third, we must advance an agenda of smart regulation. The Speech from the Throne committed the government to move forward with a strategy for accelerated regulatory reform with a view to promoting health, encouraging innovation and economic growth and reducing the burden on business. </font></p> <p><font face="Arial">We must look at how our regulatory approaches fit into the North American economic space. We made great strides in this respect in NAFTA, but NAFTA is 10 years old and we need to make further advances. </font></p> <p><font face="Arial">Let's broaden and deepen regulatory cooperation between our countries by further cutting red tape and the regulatory hurdles to doing business with each other.</font></p> <p><font face="Arial">In many areas, our countries have similar regulatory systems that work for similar goals and produce similar results. Yet each country often demands that products imported from the other go through costly testing procedures to meet domestic requirements.</font></p> <p><font face="Arial">Why not acknowledge the similarity of our systems and agree that once these products are tested in one country, they are acceptable in the other? Can we not move to the principles of mutual recognition and the elimination of duplication? </font></p> <p><font face="Arial">We have started doing this in some areas, for example civil aviation safety regulations and biotechnology issues. We are harmonizing pesticide registration and sharing information on new industrial chemicals. And through NAFTA, we are working toward harmonization of land transport standards, including tire safety recognition, thus avoiding the necessity of double testing. </font></p> <p><font face="Arial">All these represent a good start but there is much more we can do. </font></p> <p><font face="Arial">We must move on biosecurity issues to ensure a coordinated and effective response to threats to the security of public health.</font></p> <p><font face="Arial">There is room for greater regulatory convergence in the transportation sector. We need to secure and maintain our access for the trucking industry, which generates 13&nbsp;million truck trips across our border annually and 65 percent of all Canadian merchandise exports to the U.S. </font></p> <p><font face="Arial">We must reduce duplicative testing in the chemicals sector and enhance regulatory cooperation on the manufacturing of pharmaceutical and medical devices, which could save consumers a great deal in health care costs.</font></p> <p><font face="Arial">The fourth goal is a commitment to making serious efforts to bring trade remedy practice more in line with the growing integration of our shared North American economic space. </font></p> <p><font face="Arial">For example, we have long held that in an integrated North American steel market, the use of trade remedies is counterproductive. The United States recognized this in March when it did not include Canada in safeguard action on steel. Steel safeguard investigations in both Canada and the U.S. have underscored the need for us to work together to address these trade issues in ways that acknowledge our economic integration. </font></p> <p><font face="Arial">Similarly, on the energy front, Canada and the United States have built a robust, mutually beneficial energy relationship, founded upon our joint commitment to a market-based energy policy. There is a North American energy market. We must work with Mexico and the U.S. administration and Congress to recognize and protect this reality. </font></p> <p><font face="Arial">We need to review the regulatory environment for trade in oil, gas and electricity to eliminate impediments to trade in energy commodities and to facilitate the development of a single North American energy market. </font></p> <p><font face="Arial">As a fifth goal, I want to eliminate the border as an impediment to trade, investment and business development and move the border away from the border. </font></p> <p><font face="Arial">We, as governments, need to keep pace with the demands and expectations of businesses on both sides of the border who rely on just-in-time delivery and easy access to markets. </font></p> <p><font face="Arial">We should examine ways to make further improvements in technical areas, such as the NAFTA rules of origin. We have made some progress on liberalizing the NAFTA rules of origin for a number of products, making it easier to meet the NAFTA rules and qualify for NAFTA tariff preferences. We should accelerate work on this in an effort to further reduce transaction costs and make it easier for companies to do business and benefit from our integrated economies. </font></p> <p><font face="Arial">We need to further facilitate the travel of business professionals across the border.</font></p> <p><font face="Arial">We have accomplished much already through the Smart Border Declaration and a 30-point action plan signed by Governor Tom Ridge and Deputy Prime Minister John&nbsp;Manley last December. For example, Canadian and U.S. Customs pre-screen containers arriving in each other's key ports. We have created and expanded the NEXUS program that permits quick passage at the border for card holders. We have partnered with the U.S. on the FAST program for commercial traffic, which allows low-risk trucks and drivers to have their manifests sent by transponders to the customs agent at the border before the trucks arrive. The government recently announced $300&nbsp;million for new border infrastructure in the Detroit-Windsor area. </font></p> <p><font face="Arial">Let us continue to build on this momentum. </font></p> <p><font face="Arial">Sixth and finally, I propose the need for smarter advocacy and representation in the United States. Once again, the Throne Speech recognizes the need for an increased presence in the U.S. to ensure and enhance our access and advocate our interests. </font></p> <p><font face="Arial">Our economic prosperity depends on the North American market. We need offices to promote trade, seek investment and technology, and advance the interests of all Canadian government departments, provinces and the Canadian private sector. </font></p> <p><font face="Arial">Growing economic integration also means that the number and range of U.S. federal, state and municipal issues and actions have an increasingly direct and powerful impact on Canada. </font></p> <p><font face="Arial">For example, at the federal level, we know the impact of U.S. trade remedy law, which many in Congress see as a cherished instrument of public policy. The 27&nbsp;percent tax imposed on Canadian softwood lumber has led to thousands of job losses across Canada and has also harmed American consumers and the home-building industry. But the softwood action taken by the U.S. is the product of special economic and regional interests flexing their power. </font></p> <p><font face="Arial">Canada needs better intelligence and advocacy in the U.S. We need to engage Americans at the local, regional and state levels where the interests that drive congressional and administration policy are being developed and articulated.</font></p> <p><font face="Arial"><strong>Conclusion</strong></font></p> <p><font face="Arial">The plan I have outlined today is my agenda for the next couple of years. It reflects the Canada I want in the North America we are building.</font></p> <p><font face="Arial">I congratulate you on your work and I am sure our paths will cross again as we work to secure economic prosperity in North America. </font></p> <p><font face="Arial">Thank you.</font></p> </body> </html>

2007  - 2006  - 2005  - 2004  - 2003  - 2002  - 2001  - 2000  - 1999  - 1998  - 1997  - 1996

Last Updated: 2006-10-30 Top of Page
Top of Page
Important Notices