Atlantic Canada: A Safe Port in an Economic Storm
Strategic partnerships and prudent planning have put Canada's Atlantic provinces in a strong position to withstand the global recession.
June/July 09
In fact, a quiet confidence simmers nearly everywhere you go, a sense that tough times can produce opportunities if people are willing to work together. And over the past decade, government and business leaders have been doing just that as they've striven to imagine a future for the region that leverages knowledge and innovation for long-term, sustainable prosperity.
Perhaps the most tangible example of interprovincial partnership in the past year was a historic agreement between New Brunswick and Nova Scotia to reduce barriers to business, trade, and skilled labor. The Partnership Agreement on Regulation and the Economy, which was signed in Halifax, Nova Scotia, this past February, involves improved, standardized, and harmonized regulation; mutual recognition of professional and trade credentials; and clear, consistent requirements for business. New initiatives will be added as opportunities are identified.
"Removing obstacles to business and the movement of skilled workers makes good sense any time, and even more so during a period of worldwide economic challenge," said Nova Scotia Premier Rodney MacDonald at the time of the signing. "We are working hard, with a number of measures, to strengthen our economy, and this agreement with New Brunswick is another step in the right direction. It will help make it easier for businesses to operate and grow in both of our provinces."
Added New Brunswick Premier Shawn Graham, "As the list of cooperative ventures grows, we will start to see more and more common rules for both provinces, reducing the administrative time taken to understand and comply with the differences. The agreement is also about co-operation between the two provinces and systems - and projects that will help us spend taxpayers' dollars more efficiently and provide better services to citizens."
Such measures are expected to involve the other provinces in the region, as the Council of Atlantic Premiers continues to meet to explore new ways to jointly strengthen their economies and burnish the image of their respective jurisdictions as business-savvy and sophisticated for domestic and international start-ups and expansions.
Meanwhile, the region's fundamental advantages as a business location remain as compelling as ever: one of the most skilled and educated labor forces in North America, attractive tax and financial incentives, excellent transportation infrastructure and port facilities, an incomparable quality of life, and an enviable cost structure. According to the most recent KPMG Competitive Alternatives study (2008), "Atlantic Canada offers the most consistently affordable business costs within Canada, with only 1.7 points separating Moncton [New Brunswick], Fredericton [New Brunswick], Charlottetown [Prince Edward Island], and Halifax [Nova Scotia]." The report ranks all four of these cities ahead of all New England cities examined, including Manchester, New Hampshire; Burlington, Vermont; and Hartford, Connecticut.
Responding to the Downturn
If the age of big business has come crashing to a halt (at least for the moment), then the era of big government is ascending. Central banks the world over have cut interest rates to the bone. Many have introduced radical new measures to keep their financial systems from collapsing completely. Interest rates in both Canada and the United States have been at 50-year lows. The U.S. Federal Reserve cut its target rate to practically zero, and the Bank of Canada's earmark rate is mere basis points above this.
The Government of Canada has followed its American counterpart by taking the most activist role in the economy since the New Deal. It's approach - captured in the January budget this year - marries aggressive tax cuts with spending on infrastructure. The total stimulus package is expected to be close to $40 billion over two years, which amounts to roughly 2.5 percent of national gross domestic product. (Unless otherwise indicated, all dollar figures are in Canadian dollars.)
In reality, this commitment is far less than that made by the United States and many other nations, where stimulus spending amounts to between 5 and 10 percent of overall productivity. Canada's decision, according to the International Monetary Fund, is both reasonable and prudent, and positions the country to emerge into recovery more quickly and healthier than several of its trading partners.
Given these new circumstances, the provincial governments are expected to play a significant role in delivering the funds. According to the Atlantic Provinces Economic Council (APEC), this could be a mixed blessing. "Cash-strapped Atlantic provincial governments may need to borrow in order to contribute matching infrastructure funding," says APEC in its Winter Outlook, 2009. "However, they may be reluctant to do so when their own budgets are heading into deficit territory. Both New Brunswick and Prince Edward Island are now expecting larger deficits in the current fiscal year, partly due to a deteriorating economy. Newfoundland and Labrador could be facing several years of deficit if oil prices remain below US$50/barrel."
On the other hand, APEC reports, "Provinces may be quite willing to borrow for infrastructure programs where they have already participated in setting priorities. Prince Edward Island, for example, is boosting its capital spending over the next three fiscal years while New Brunswick is providing a two-year boost. The jump in capital spending in both provinces in 2009 amounts to about 0.7 per cent of provincial GDP. Numerous road, bridge, and other infrastructure projects are already identified for shared cost expenditures in all four provinces."
In other words, according to APEC, the potential advantage of the economic downturn is that it has brought the debate on the merits of government action out from behind closed doors and into new corners of Canadian society.
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