Thank you very much, Mr. Chairman. It's my great pleasure to be in front of the committee today.
I'll be talking to you about the state of the B.C. economy and some of the challenges and opportunities therein, as well as giving you a bit of a thumbnail sketch of what we do in Western Economic Diversification in British Columbia.
Let me start with some of the basics of the structure of the B.C. economy.
B.C. hosts a dual economy. The Lower Mainland and Southern Vancouver Island’s broadly diversified service economies contrast with rural areas that largely depend on natural resources.
B.C.’s service sector accounts for 76% of GDP. The sector comprises industries such as finance, shipping, engineering, education, film production—which is very important—tourism and high-tech. B.C. has a relatively small domestic market, and wealth creation depends heavily on exporting natural resources, which account for about 75% of the province’s merchandise exports.
The U.S. remains B.C.’s largest customer, consuming 52% of export sales in 2015. However, exports to Asia have grown quickly recently. Asia now accounts for 38% of the province’s export sales.
Another key shift in B.C.’s economy relates to job creation. The province’s high-tech sector employs 87,000 workers, more than the province’s once dominant forest industry at 58,000 workers.
Public sector capital investments in major projects play a really important role in anchoring and driving expansion in the B.C. economy. Major projects in play include the site C clean energy project, port expansion proposals in Prince Rupert and at the Roberts Bank container terminal, the so-called T2 project in the Lower Mainland. There are of course energy projects that have been in the news: the Pacific NorthWest LNG proposal and the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion; and then there are transit proposals like the Massey Tunnel replacement and the Evergreen Line between Coquitlam and Vancouver.
With that economic context in mind, let me shift to talk about the performance of the B.C. economy. Our economy gained momentum significantly in 2015, posting 3.0% growth in real GDP. This is forecast to lead all provinces both this year and next.
That upswing is driven by a surging residential real estate market, which drives record-setting construction and renovation activity in the province, strong consumer spending, rising exports, that expanding tech sector which I mentioned earlier, a couple of really banner years in tourism, as well as shipbuilding under the national shipbuilding strategy.
Our economy in B.C. has been relatively less affected overall by the decline in oil and gas prices compared to the other western provinces.
Our employment growth is forecast to increase by 2.8% in 2016. In fact, so far we've already seen 87,000 new jobs created in the year to date in B.C. The unemployment rates in B.C. hover around 6% province-wide, relative to a national rate of about 7%. It's important to note, however, that those job gains have been concentrated in the Lower Mainland and in southern Vancouver Island. It's a very different situation in the rest of the province, where unemployment rates have crept up in recent years.
That increase in exports that I mentioned is driven mostly by wood products, as well as agriculture and agrifood products. Those have been partly offset by declines in natural gas and in metallurgical coal shipments.
Notwithstanding that relatively bright picture, B.C.'s economic outlook shows some increasing risks. In 2015, household debt in Canada was at a record level of almost 170% of disposable income. That's well in excess of historical norms.
A recent study by my good friend Mr. Jock Finlayson at the Business Council of B.C. estimated that the housing sector is responsible for somewhere between 35% and 40% of the recent economic growth in B.C. So that 3% economic growth, without the housing sector, would be less than 2%. That concentration of activity related to housing presents a real risk.
There's also a real risk associated with the uncertainty relating to the expiry of the Canada-U.S. softwood lumber agreement, as well as the reductions in timber available to harvest due to the mountain pine beetle infestation. We have rising skilled worker shortages across the province in many sectors. Final investment decisions on some of those major energy projects remain pending.
Let me point out a couple of key features that I think are important to distinguish B.C. from some of the other western provinces. I like to point out continually to my colleagues that B.C. is different. In addition to being the least rectangular of the western provinces, it is also, I would say, a bit more of a patchwork than other places in the west are. We're fragmented geographically, obviously, by mountains and rivers. There are seven very different economic development regions within the province. When it comes to the metro Vancouver region, as some of you might know, metro Vancouver has 22 separate municipalities. Of course B.C. is home to 203 first nations bands, which is about one-third of the national total.
In my opinion, there are couple of other salient features that make working in B.C. interesting. The province’s geographic position makes it Canada’s Pacific Gateway, a role of great national importance. While not a likely source of future growth, the forest sector is still a mainstay for many rural communities. Vancouver has a reputation for being one of the most Asian cities outside of Asia. It is also the province with the least coverage of final treaties with First Nations.
Now let me turn to what WD is up to in B.C. Firstly, WD is actively involved in delivering on a number of recent federal budget commitments. In particular, we have just completed a review of some 450 B.C. applications received under the Canada 150 Community Infrastructure Program, CIP 150, for 2016. We are working with other RDAs to double our joint investments in clean technology under a 2016 federal budget commitment to increase spending on clean tech to $100-million annually. Finally, we are supporting federal work aimed at engaging Canadians in consultations to define Canada’s innovation agenda.
Also, we are delivering on our core departmental funding and policy responsibilities against our four departmental priorities of innovation, trade and investment, indigenous economic growth, and defence procurement. The core funding also supports our western innovation program, or WINN, as well as a province-wide network of service delivery partners, including 34 community futures development corporations. We also serve as a delivery agent in support of some other federal initiatives. We're participating, for example, in the Department of Indigenous and Northern Affairs' strategic partnerships initiative that targets indigenous participation in economic development.
Last, from time to time over the years, WD has taken on the delivery of some large federal programming, things like temporary adjustment programs or infrastructure initiatives.
Going forward, there are some challenges that we're responding to in B.C. In innovation, a lack of capital is constraining commercialization of new products and services. Our response, the WINN program, is well oversubscribed, meaning that we have to turn down quality projects in industries like clean tech, life sciences, space, oceans, and information and digital technologies. As well, we have a real challenge in our traditional resource industries which are facing technological challenges. We're trying to increase the linkages between innovative small and medium-sized enterprises, for example, in the clean tech sector, to help address some of those issues in the resource industries. In trade and investment, only 3% of businesses in B.C. export at all. Among small and medium-sized enterprises, only 1.3% of B.C.'s businesses export.
We have an opportunity there to help firms become more export ready and position them to capitalize on opportunities presented by our international trade agreements.
In terms of indigenous economic growth, we know that capacity constraints limit participation of many first nations in the economy, and that leads to missed opportunities. We've worked successfully with first nations to support skills development and entrepreneurial training in preparation, for example, for opportunities in resource development and energy, as well as shipbuilding.
We've advanced clean energy projects in communities through the B.C. indigenous clean energy initiative. This is one of those projects that was financed through Indigenous and Northern Affairs' strategic partnerships initiative, SPI, funding. We're in the middle of going through those projects now, in partnership with the New Relationship Trust. We've received 51 applications for assistance under that program, including 14 from off-grid communities. Our budget there is only $4 million, so that's going to limit the extent to which we can respond to those opportunities.
Last, in defence procurement, we play a role in trying to match small and medium-sized enterprises in the west, in B.C., with the prime contractors, under Canada's industrial and technological benefits program. We help position those SMEs as suppliers to those prime contractors through events like our western innovation forum that is coming up this November in Vancouver.
So in closing, I would like to thank the Committee for letting me brag a bit about the great things that the WD team is doing in BC.
I will be glad to answer any questions that you have today.
Thank you, Mr. Chair.