I'm going to be presenting from the point of view of an e-commerce company.
At L'Encrier, we manufacture and sell ink and toner consumable products, and we do so 100% online. Some 76% of everything we sell is exported: 70% to the United States and 6% globally. We are a true e-commerce company. The future of retail, as you know, is becoming more and more e-commerce. It's fast-growing, and e-commerce will play an important role in the Canadian economy.
Canada Post is the only carrier that covers every household in Canada. It's the only carrier that will take our parcels throughout the country. Canada Post is therefore a vital infrastructure that drives the e-commerce industry.
I don't know if this committee is aware of the international agreement called the Universal Postal Union. I'm not an expert on the agreement, but I know that when a parcel arrives in a country, the post office of that country must deliver it to any address within their country for the same fixed price, and the price is determined by the agreement, which for a rich country like Canada turns out to be quite low.
Our competitors abroad will bring in packages, and regardless of where they appear in Canada, the post office has to deliver to the final destination, whether it's Toronto or Nunavut, for the same low fixed price, whereas Canadians who sell online must pay very different prices depending on where it's going in the country.
Price fluctuation is very bad for e-commerce, because we can't predict what it's going to cost. I don't know if anyone here shops online, but no one wants to pay for shipping. They want to see free shipping. That's the new thing that's happening. So we are forced to put the cost of the shipping within our parcels.
I would like to also discuss the disparities with our biggest trading partner, the United States. The Americans have made changes to their post office, and they continue doing it to enable e-commerce. An example would be that it takes two to three days on average to deliver a package between New York and California, but it takes four to six days with a comparable product in Canada between Montreal and British Columbia.
The price fluctuation in the U.S. is a lot less. They have fewer zones. There's less fluctuation in prices between the zones, and they've introduced flat-rate boxes. Their motto is “if it fits, it ships”, at one low price regardless of where in the country: Hawaii, Alaska, Guam, California, it doesn't matter. They realize that price fluctuation is not good, and they've standardized for their country.
Typically, an American can ship a package to Europe for about half the price a Canadian can. When a Canadian ships a package to the United States using Canada Post, it costs about two to three times our domestic rates. I know they're trying to do things to improve it, but still it's at least 200% more.
Americans who want to ship to Canadians are paying about 30% to 40% above their domestic rates to do so. Again, that's another disadvantage.
How can we compete? Why am I still in business? Why am I here? It's because I'm doing everything that all the other e-commerce companies are doing. Thank God we live near the border, because we're putting all our packages onto a truck and we're going across that border every day and putting everything for delivery internationally and within the United States into the United States Postal Service. So 76% of everything we do in L'Encrier ends up in the hands of the United States Postal Service.
That only solves half the problem. The other half of the problem is Canadians buying. If you live in a remote region, it is cheaper for you to buy from an American who is going to offer free shipping into Canada, or a Chinese company directly, than it is to buy from your own Canadian companies, because they don't face this large price fluctuation that is created by this Universal Postal Union.
We have a paradox, which is my last point because I know I'm taking a bit of extra time. The paradox is that we want Canada Post to be efficient, effective, and provide all the services we need for e-commerce, letter mail, and everything else. On the other hand, we want it to be profitable.
How can a company be profitable when you have all these parcels coming in internationally that have to be delivered? By the way, the number is going up. The statistic I heard is that as many as 50% of Canadians are buying products from abroad instead of from other Canadians.
If e-commerce grows and that trend continues, we're going to have more and more packages that have to be delivered across the country cheaply as opposed to packages from our own domestic market. It's obvious that in order to cope with this problem, Canada Post has to raise prices elsewhere, maybe international shipments, maybe across our own country, to compensate because they have to balance the books at the end of the year.
The point is, do we consider Canada Post a service or do we consider Canada Post part of our infrastructure? If we consider Canada Post to be part of the Canadian e-commerce infrastructure, then, like any other infrastructure, like paying for a bridge or paying for a tunnel, we need to invest in that kind of service. If it could be done by the private sector, it would be, and it's not. Only Canada Post goes across the whole country.
The conclusion is, the United States do subsidize their post office because they provide all these great services, but they do it at a deficit, and it's an important deficit. I don't know the exact numbers, but I'm sure it's in the billions of dollars. We don't want to create deficits in Canada for no reason, but we do need to do something to normalize the e-commerce platform before we're inundated by foreign imports. At the end, I believe we too must invest in our e-commerce infrastructure.