Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
As you indicated, I'm here representing the Canada China Business Council as its president, but also in my own right as a former deputy minister of foreign affairs and as the first co-chair of the Canada-China strategic working group, a group of bilateral officials that was established 10 years ago to examine ways in which to strengthen the business and political relationships between the two countries.
The Canada China Business Council, the CCBC, has about 250 member organizations, which represent a broad range of sectors of the Canadian economy. Our members include companies, educational institutions, and governments at all three levels. Increasingly, by the way, municipalities are getting into the economic development game in a very sophisticated fashion, particularly with a focus on Asia.
Our corporate members are approximately two-thirds small and medium-sized enterprises. We provide our members with services that help them do more business between Canada and China. The council has chapters in Ontario, Quebec, Alberta, British Columbia, and then in Beijing and Shanghai.
With respect to the subject before us, in December 2012 the CCBC and the Toronto Financial Services Alliance began discussing the possibility of an RMB trading hub in Canada. At a meeting in January 2013, we convened representatives from two Canadian banks and two Chinese banks to assess their interest levels, which were, I would say, moderate but not overly enthusiastic. Nonetheless, there was enough interest for the TFSA to commission a report examining how such hubs had worked in other jurisdictions. Remember, there is not, until now, a hub in the Americas. By the time the report was presented in June 2013 to a larger group of financial industry stakeholders, the enthusiasm level among players had significantly enhanced, and we observed stronger support in some respects reflecting the growth of RMB use worldwide.
This growth in RMB use has accelerated, including in Canada, although, I'd have to admit, and your report shows, it was a very small base to begin with. However, by mid-2014 it was clear that Canada was lagging behind its peers in use of RMB for trading, even behind peers in the United States, which, I would remind this group, still has not succeeded in achieving an RMB hub.
The CCBC feels strongly that the establishment of a North American RMB trading hub in Canada is a very positive development for Canadian business. We applaud Finance Canada and the Government of Canada for making the announcement a key deliverable in the Prime Minister’s November trip to China, which I had the pleasure of hosting the luncheon for.
Why are we in favour of this hub? As the very good report by the Chamber of Commerce summarized last October, and I quote, “This has created a unique, once in a generation opportunity for Canada’s businesses and banks to leap ahead of competitors and become early adopters of RMB, currently the world’s fastest growing currency.”
This is a very positive development in the bilateral relations, and we need to have positive developments in this relationship. In the background, where it's taken two years to ratify the FIPA, where the adjustments to the foreign investment review process involving SOEs has generally been not well received in China, and where Canada has yet to respond to the complementarities study, which was released in 2012, where both parties identified key sectors for future trade liberalization, this is a welcome, positive step and one that should go noticed and underscored by all of us involved in the bilateral relationship.
The RMB is a perfect, non-controversial relationship builder in an environment with many controversial elements. It is non-controversial because it’s about putting more money in Canadian companies' pockets. Right now, with most sales and purchase contracts denominated in U.S. dollars, Canadian companies incur significant exchange and transaction costs. As Mr. Brakel referenced, these costs are not just one-way exchanges but often three-way exchanges. That adds to the burden of very small margins.
Many Chinese companies are happy to deal in RMB, as this lowers their transaction costs as well. Research has shown that they are willing to share the savings with their vendors and customers.
The hub also provides a useful hedge for Canadian companies that invest in China. Let me give you an example using our own council. As I mentioned earlier, we have offices in both Shanghai and Beijing. Our representative offices can incur expenses in China, but any revenues must be generated outside of China. Therefore, every month we must wire money to cover our expenses. With the Canadian dollar declining by about 25% in the last year or so, we value the opportunity to convert RMB dollars and hold them, so that we can have a much more predictable rate of expense in our Chinese offices in Shanghai and Beijing.
Some people ask why we need a hub if we are already seeing growth in RMB use. Well, the existence of the hub will both increase awareness amongst Canadian companies, and more importantly, at least in our view, encourage small and medium-sized businesses to participate in the growing Chinese market, which we all agree is important for us.
Thank you.