Thank you very much, Mr. Chair and committee, for this opportunity.
I'm Janet Ecker, president and CEO of the Toronto Financial Services Alliance. With me is Sheryl Kennedy, who is the CEO of Promontory Financial Group Canada and a former deputy governor of the Bank of Canada. Sheryl and her firm were advisers to the TFSA in its leadership role on the RMB initiative.
We are a unique public-private partnership dedicated to growing Toronto region as a top 10 international financial centre. We're a collaboration involving three levels of government, the financial industry, and academia, and we work to grow the sector, to strengthen our global reputation, and to enhance our competitiveness as an international centre.
It was a logical step for us to seek an agreement with China to designate Canada as an RMB trading hub. Let me explain.
As members know, Canada's economy is becoming more globally oriented. International trade and investments contribute more to the country's bottom line, with China now our second-largest trading partner, after the U.S. Bank of Canada governors and the Canadian government are encouraging our businesses to reach out around the world.
Our financial industry is part of that story. After surviving the global crisis relatively unscathed, financial firms used this strength to grow their global footprint, thus benefiting our economy.
For example, financial services trade continues to expand. Since 2000, global exports have tripled, while Canadian exports have nearly quadrupled. The financial services share of total Canadian services exports rose steadily, almost doubling from 5.9% a decade ago to 11% in 2013. Canada's outward financial services foreign direct investment has more than tripled since 1999. In 2013, the sector accounted for 53% of Canada's total FDI stock abroad, up from 44% a decade earlier. One third of Canadian banks' revenue is generated from outside Canada. Canadian insurance firms such as Manulife and Sun Life rank among the top 20 in the world and are active in Asian markets and beyond. Canada's large pension funds rank number three in the world in terms of assets and are well regarded global investors, particularly in infrastructure projects, a pressing need in Asian and other markets.
We also recognize that China was seeking to internationalize its currency and had already designated a number of trading hubs in such places as Hong Kong, Singapore, and London. A centre for the Americas only made sense.
To achieve it, however, would take the collaborative efforts of the financial industry and government. As is typical of TFSA initiatives, we reached out to our industry and government partners to create a working group to drive this initiative. Its members include representatives of a cross-section of domestic and international institutions active in Canada, as well as the federal and Ontario governments and the Bank of Canada as observers.
We were also very pleased that a broad spectrum of business and other organizations supported the initiative. The Canadian Chamber of Commerce, the Canadian Manufacturers & Exporters, the Canada China Business Council, the Canadian Council of Chief Executives, Toronto, Finance Montréal, AdvantageBC, the B.C. government, the Asia Pacific Foundation, and Export Development Canada have all lent their support. It is particularly worth drawing the committee's attention to the fact that AdvantageBC, TFSA, and Finance Montréal are working collaboratively on this initiative, underlining both the national reach of the industry, despite the fact that it is headquartered in Toronto region, and the fact that the benefits of this agreement will accrue across the country.
As the committee knows, in November Prime Minister Harper signed the agreement with China to designate Canada as an RMB trading hub for the Americas. I had the privilege of attending the announcement in Beijing and would like to congratulate the government on this successful initiative.
The committee knows that there are three measures that were part of the agreement: designating the Industrial and Commercial Bank of China as the clearing bank, setting up the reciprocal currency swap line, and also establishing a renminbi qualified foreign institutional investor quota to Canadian financial institutions
What does this mean for the economy and Canadian business? The measures announced will allow direct exchange and trade operations between our two countries. As a result, Canadian firms doing business with China will no longer be required to settle their transactions through an intermediate currency such as the U.S. dollar, thereby mitigating currency risks and reducing transaction costs. An HSBC survey showed 55% of Chinese businesses said they would offer discounts to their trading partners for RMB-denominated transactions.
On the broader economic impacts, TFSA sponsored the Canadian Chamber of Commerce report that cited direct trade benefits alone of an RMB trading hub at over $32 billion over the next 10 years. In addition, Canadian financial institutions will benefit by being able to provide a broad range of services and products throughout the Americas: trade finance, contract bonding, chequing accounts, short-term liquidity, long-term financing, and investment products.
The bottom line is that this agreement will continue to raise our stature as a global financial centre with a major financial industry in this country, facilitate increased investment in trade, and strengthen Canada's broader economic relationship with China. As we seek to broaden our base of trading partners, building the reach and expertise of our financial sector and emerging economies around the world is critical. This is another important step in that direction. We now need to take advantage of this opportunity.
Thank you very much.