Jock Finlayson's presentation to the BC Natural Resources Forum looks at the economic contribution of resources to BC's economy. Spoiler Alert: Resources represent 13% of BC's GDP, 77% of merchandise exports and lumber remains our largest export product. Jock notes, however, that Canada is losing ground on our competitiveness, particularly compared to the United States.
Dividend Policy and Dividend Decision Theories.pptx
The Shifting Competitive Landscape for BC's Natural Resource Industries
1. www.bcbc.com | @bizcouncilbc
T H E S H I F T I N G C O M P E T I T I V E L A N D S C A P E F O R O U R
N AT U R A L R E S O U R C E I N D U S T R I E S
JANUARY 18, 2018
PRESENTED TO
B C N AT U R A L R E S O U R C E S F O R U M
P R I N C E G E O R G E , B C
JOCK FINLAYSON, Executive VP and Chief Policy Officer (Jock.Finlayson@bcbc.com)
2. NAFTA : I NI TI AL E X P E CTATI O NS
“We will modernize
NAFTA so that it is a win-
win for all our trading
partners” (VP Mike
Pence)
“More than our entire
deficit (with Canada)
comes from hydrocarbons
and electric energy… I
don’t call that blameful
exports” (Commerce
Secretary Wilbur Ross)
2
3. BUT…
“We can’t let Canada…
take advantage and do
what they did to our
workers and farmers… I
want to just mention
included in there is
lumber, timber and
energy”
“We lose with Canada –
big-league. Tremendous,
tremendous trade deficits
with Canada.”
3
4. US TRAD E BAL AN CE S : THE NO N - FAK E NE WS
( U S $ B I L L I O N S )
4
Sources: BCBC; USTR.
Goods Trade – 12 months to June 2017
Exports to Imports from Balance
Value of
total trade
Canada 272 291 -19 563
Mexico 235 304 -69 539
China 124 480 -356 604
U.S. Services Trade Balance
(4-quarter monthly series)
With Canada +23
With Mexico +4
Total
U.S. Goods/Services Balance
With Canada +4
With Mexico -65
6. NAFTA E ND G AM E S CE N ARI O S …
6
• Scenario 1: A renewed agreement is stitched together in 2018
o this outcome looks increasingly unlikely
• Scenario 2: US officially announces NAFTA withdrawal (with six months’ notice)
o negotiating tactic or a real choice?
o reaction in Congress…can the legislative branch prevent termination?
o legal action in the courts?
• Under Scenario 2, the Canada-US FTA may come back to life
o FTA legislation remains ‘on the books’ in the US
o would Trump support this…or try to kill the bilateral FTA as well?
• Implications for Canada if NAFTA unravels…
o a small hit to GDP and employment (~1% of real GDP)
o negative impact on the currency and business sentiment
o the #1 risk: capital investment and management attention shift further toward the US,
reinforcing an already well established trend in the energy and manufacturing sectors
7. CAN A D A CO NTI NUE S TO LO S E M ARKE T S HAR E I N THE US
7
Source: Desjardins Economic Studies, Economic News, February 17, 2016.
0
5
10
15
20
25
1988 1990 1992 1994 1996 1998 2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 2015 2016
Country share of total US merchandise imports, per cent
Canada Mexico China
Canada
down
6.0
percentage
points
since
2000
8. CAN A DI AN BUS I NE S S I NV E S TM E NT HAS P LUNG E D
8
Source: Statistics Canada, CANSIM 380-0064. Seasonally adjusted annual rates.
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17
Canadian capital investment as a share of GDP, %
residential non-residential
9. … AT A TI M E O F RE CO RD HO US E HO LD DE BT ACC UM UL ATI O N
9
Source: Statistics Canada, CANSIM table 378-0123
Latest Q2 2017
80
90
100
110
120
130
140
150
160
170
1990 1992 1994 1996 1998 2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 2016
Canadian household debt to disposable income, %
10. R E V E AL E D C O M PAR AT I V E AD VA N TA G E ( R C A)
10
• A country is considered to have a revealed comparative advantage in a particular class of
traded goods if those goods comprise a larger share of its exports than of total global trade
in the same class of goods
• Using this methodology, Canada has a positive RCA across many segments of the main
natural resource industries operating in our economy…including:
o oil and gas;
o lumber;
o pulp and paper;
o metallurgical coal;
o many base and precious metals;
o aluminum;
o fertilizers and some chemical products
• Canada also has a positive RCA in 18 agricultural commodities, including wheat, oats,
barely, rye, certain seafood products, soybeans, and pulses
12. E FFE CTI V E TAX RATE S O N NE W I NV E S TM E NT:
CURRE NT FO R CAN A D A AN D US
12
*Oil and gas is not included in aggregate result.
Source: School of Public Policy, University of Calgary.
0%
5%
10%
15%
20%
25%
30%
35%
40%
45%
Forestry Electric Power,
Gas & Water
Manufacturing Oil & Gas* Aggregate
2017 US Tax Rates US Tax Cut & Jobs Act Canada
13. CAR BO N P RI CE S I N NO RTH AM E RI C A, 2 0 1 7 ( I N E U R O S )
13
Source: Institute for Climate Economics.
(In 2018, the BC carbon tax rises
to the equivalent of 23.1 euros)
14. R E S O U R C E I N D U S T R I E S I N B R I T I S H C O L U M B I A
14
• 12-13% of the province’s real GDP
• 75-77% of merchandise exports (if LNG comes to fruition, the figure will rise)
• The management, discovery, extraction, and processing of natural resources provide the
economic foundation for most communities in the north and interior
• Resource companies and their suppliers represent a significant part of BC’s “corporate
economy” concentrated in Metro Vancouver
• BC has room to leverage the province’s relatively low-carbon energy system to attract
new investment and industrial development, and build a brand as an environmentally
responsible supplier of resources and resource-based goods in a carbon-constrained world
15. R E S O U R C E S D O M I N AT E B C ’ S E X P O R T B AS E
15
Source: BC Stats.
0
5,000
10,000
15,000
20,000
25,000
30,000
35,000
40,000
1996 1998 2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 2016
BC international merchandise exports, millions $
resources & related products
Total exports
77.7%
82.2%
76.7%
16. L U M B E R I S O U R L AR G E S T E X P O R T P R O D U C T
Source: BC Stats.
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
lumber metallic
mineral
products
machinery
& equip
coal pulp &
paper
other
wood
products
agriculture natural
gas
fish
products
fabricated
metal prod
BC exports by major commodity 2016, billions $
16
17. W H Y R E S O U R C E S I N B C C AR RY D I S P R O P O R T I O N AT E W E I G H T
17
• Strong export-orientation
• High productivity industries
• High wages (mining is #1, followed closely by pulp, oil & gas, forestry, also pay well above
average)
• Most business inputs used in resource extraction and processing are sourced domestically
(raw materials, energy, labour, transportation, business services)
o import content of BC resource products is quite low
o machinery/equipment is the main imported input
• Resource industries important to urban areas
o several billion dollars annually spent on business inputs purchased from Metro
Vancouver suppliers
o head offices generate economic benefits - of BC’s top 100 companies, 23 are resource
firms and most are headquartered in Metro Vancouver
18. P U B L I C P O L I C Y E L E M E N T S T H AT S H AP E T H E C O M P E T I T I V E
E N V I R O N M E N T F O R C AN A D I A N R E S O U R C E I N D U S T R I E S
18
• Access to resources (mainly found on Crown land in Western provinces)
• Royalties, fees and other non-tax levies
• Taxes on income, property and inputs
• Cost of energy
• Quality/cost of transportation
• Efficiency and predictability of government regulatory regimes affecting resource
development and industry operations (project assessment, land use planning, operational
and facility permitting, contaminated sites, carbon management obligations, etc.)
• Ability to sell into international end-user markets on favourable terms…via trade agreements
In some of these policy domains, Canada has been losing ground on competitiveness…
especially vis-à-vis the United States