We agree with you completely. This is very urgent; it cannot wait.
It's simply because people are deciding today where to invest. The decisions are being made day by day: is Canada a place to put your money, or should it be put in mills in the south? So the faster we act on the all-party manufacturing committee recommendations, the more money gets invested in Canada. There's a tendency to look at the job figures and say this is how things are going. That's where the puck was yesterday. Where the puck is going is where the investment is going, and we can't move too quickly. It is very urgent that we make these changes.
To be fair, the government has done a lot of good things, and we respect that very deeply. To be fair, the unprecedented impact—at one point it was up 65% over five years; that almost never happens. In Germany, their currency has gone up 10% and the minister of finance was saying they've got to worry about this, they can't have a currency that fluctuates that way. The head of the European Bank started to talk about the impact on industry of a 10% change in the euro relative to the dollar. We seem to have sat back, and I'm not criticizing anyone in particular on this. I think as a politically light group of economists, we've sat back and said this is what happens. It shouldn't happen.
I don't agree that the government can't do anything about the dollar. There is a philosophy behind what the Bank of Canada does. It's a philosophy based upon the single value being the control of inflation and a belief that intervention can't work, but when Mr. Dodge and Mr. Flaherty expressed serious concern, the speculators got the message and the dollar started to come back down.
So I think we need to take more responsibility for our currency, because our currency is the base of our economy. I'm not talking about fixing the dollar or intervening in a way that sets it somewhere where the economics don't make sense, but the relative economic strength of Canada relative to the U.S. doesn't change 20% a year. Our productivity hasn't zoomed up so we can explain a 20% raise. Theirs hasn't dropped. The dollar's movement reflects speculators, not basic economics. Of course, it shouldn't be at 70¢, but neither should it go up that much that quickly. It should reflect basic economics, not the greed of speculators.