Yes, that would be great.
Good morning, Mr. Chairman and members of the committee. I would like to introduce my colleague, Mr. Tom Rosser, who is appearing with me today; he is FPAC's chief economist.
On behalf of the member companies of the Forest Products Association of Canada, let me first say that we greatly welcome this important opportunity to provide the committee with perspectives regarding the economic climate within which Canada's forest products industry is currently operating.
Your investigation into the issues confronting the Canadian manufacturing sector is very timely, since, in my view, this is an urgent economic challenge that Canada has not yet fully recognized.
By way of background, FPAC is the national and international voice of Canada's wood, pulp and paper producers in government, trade, and environmental affairs. FPAC's 20 member companies include the largest integrated producers of pulp and paper, lumber, and other wood products, with operations across the country. FPAC's members are responsible for 70% of the working forests in Canada.
With annual earnings of over $80 billion, the Canadian forest product industry accounts for over 3 per cent of Canada's GDP. It directly employs some 320,000 people in well-paid highly productive positions. It is the economic engine for over 300 communities across Canada.
Annual exports amount to over $45 billion, making the industry the world's largest exporter of forest products. Clearly, our industry is not only the main pillar of Canada's rural economy, but also a key player in Canada's economy as a whole.
This industry is a vital part of Canada's manufacturing sector and faces many similar challenges to those of other Canadian manufacturers. It is unique in its broad reach across rural Canada, where the industry provides high-tech, high-wage employment in regions where this would not otherwise be readily available.
Mr. Chairman, with that as a backdrop, I would now like to turn to address the subject at hand and provide the committee with a sense of the challenges currently facing Canada's manufacturing sector, particularly as they pertain to the forest products sector. I'd like to talk about three things: the outlook for the industry, what the industry is doing, and how the government can support industry's efforts.
Canada's forest products industry is in a time of dramatic and rapid transformation. We're facing significant challenges. Indeed, over the last few years, Canada's forest products companies have faced a confluence of challenges that some observers have referred to as the perfect storm: high and rising energy prices, increasing competition from low-cost overseas producers, declining demand in some market segments, and a softwood lumber dispute that has drained over $5 billion out of the industry. It is very likely that if these were the only components of the perfect storm, the industry could ride through the rough water with little difficulty. However, while all of these are certainly significant challenges, their magnitude and impact have been amplified by the rapid rise in the value of the Canadian dollar, and this alone is arguably the single most critical challenge affecting this sector at this time.
Consider that the Canadian dollar has risen by over 40% in four years, and there have been significant consequences of this increase for this industry, which is almost entirely export oriented. And while the dollar's rise certainly impacts all Canadian manufacturing, its impact on the forest products sector is even more acute because this industry's input costs are almost entirely in Canadian dollars while the majority of its sales are in U.S. dollars.
I'd like to take a moment on this point. This sector has the largest exposure to both the dollar and energy costs of any manufacturing sector in Canada, particularly on the pulp and paper side. So what happens is that as costs go up--energy, labour, and fibre costs--revenues go down. This has created tremendous pressure for consolidation in the pulp and paper sector over the past few years.
The solid wood segment of the industry has been faring better due to a prolonged housing boom in the United States. But we see that construction boom starting to soften, and prices have started to soften over the last year.
Yet despite all the challenges that this sector is facing, there is light at the end of the tunnel. Global demand for forest products has been increasing steadily over recent years. For example, in paper and paper board, global consumption has increased annually by 3% a year over the last decade. In addition, in the solid wood sector, there are considerable opportunities to create new markets, new geographic markets, such as China, or new applications for traditional products, such as expanding the use of wood in non-residential construction within North America--for example, for schools, light commercial buildings, community centres, that sort of thing.
With this in mind, Canada's forest products industry has substantial strengths that can be used as building blocks for a renewed and revitalized industry. Taking immediate action will allow the industry to capture its share of growing world markets, revitalize its capital stock, sustain rapid productivity growth, and provide high-quality jobs across the country.
So what has the industry done?
The industry has not sat idly by waiting for the crisis to pass. Rather, it has done the opposite. Canadian forest products companies have continued to diversify and invest. Each year, the industry spends over $500 million on research and development, and thus constitutes one of the largest private sources of innovation in Canada's economy.
Moreover, each year it invests $4 million in improving its facilities. This is how it has achieved a productivity level that compares favourably with that of the Canadian economy as a whole, and with that of its US counterparts.
Over the last 60 years, for example, in the solid wood sector of the industry, productivity growth has surpassed productivity growth for the manufacturing sector as a whole, and that sector has increased its productivity by 30% over a six-year period. As we look ahead, the key factor is where future investment is going. It is this that will determine the future and it is this that will determine Canada's prospects in this industry and in the manufacturing sector as a whole.
Finally, I would like to discuss what governments can do. The public policy framework within which the industry operates is a critical competitiveness factor. A government, whether it be federal, provincial, or municipal, is a central player in establishing the industry's business climate or hosting conditions. Government determines taxation levels, environment and forestry regulations, and competition policy, and it regulates transportation. As the industry keeps pace with global competition, government must also keep pace to ensure that hosting conditions are equally, if not more, competitive than the hosting conditions facing our competitors.
Before the dollar began its free ascent, addressing these hosting conditions was important but perhaps not urgent. However, with the dollar's unchecked rise showing few signs of abating, ensuring that Canada has the most competitive domestic policy framework becomes an absolute imperative.
With this in mind, the industry is urging the government to take action in several areas.
The first is to ensure that Canada's investment climate is as attractive as possible. A recent C.D. Howe study concluded that while Canada's overall tax rates are at the middle of the pack among OECD countries, our tax on capital investment is among the highest. Canada is not competitive when it comes to capital investment, and it is capital that will allow our manufacturing industries to continue to thrive.
Perhaps the single most important thing the federal government can do to promote the renewal of this sector is to make the taxation of investment in the forest sector more globally competitive. Analyses have consistently shown that the marginal effective tax rate on investment in Canada's forest industry is the highest of any major producing country in the world, and far higher than that faced by Canada's other resource industries.
Government policy should create incentives for investment by providing accelerated depreciation of capital equipment and tax incentives to encourage new investment.
Secondly, federal competition policy needs to be reviewed, and impediments to market-based adjustment must be removed to allow the industry to achieve further economies of scale. Canadian producers need to be able to achieve the same world-class scale as foreign-based competition and major North American customers. To give you an example, Canada's largest forest products company, Abitibi, is the 21st-largest forest products company in the world. Our top three competitors in North America are the first, second, and third largest in the world. All of them are five times as large as our largest forest products company.
Another example is--