Thank you very much, Mr. Chair and members, for the opportunity to participate in these hearings today.
I'll just quickly introduce the CAW. Canadian Auto Workers is Canada's largest private sector trade union. We represent currently about 260,000 members, working in a wide range of sectors—we count at least 16 different economic sectors—in Canada. The auto industry is obviously the financial core of our organization, but the auto industry per se only represents about 30% of our members. The rest work in a wide range of manufacturing and service occupations.
The impact of the high Canadian dollar has been felt very acutely by our auto members, but not exclusively by them. In many of our other sectors, the Canadian dollar has been exacting a very negative impact on employment, investment, and export opportunities.
In terms of the impact of the rise of the Canadian dollar, up by about 60% since 2002, we have acknowledged that it has already contributed to the loss of over 300,000 direct positions in the manufacturing sector in Canada. We recently went on the record as saying that if the dollar stays at or near parity with the U.S. dollar—in other words, if the dollar stays where it is roughly today—we will lose at least another 300,000 jobs on top of the 300,000 that have already been lost.
The impact of the high dollar is felt on investment and employment plans, with a lag that is very similar to the lag between interest rate changes and real economic production. About two to three years is what it takes for the changes in the dollar to trickle down into their full impact on investment and employment in manufacturing and other sectors.
That is for a range of reasons. A number of companies, particularly the larger ones, hedge against currency fluctuations, and that gives them a bit of a cushion for a while against the rising dollar, but that runs out. Many of them are engaged in longer-term supply contracts in the auto parts industry, for example. It's quite common for companies to have a five-year contract to supply parts to a particular assembler. So they will continue supplying those parts even if they end up losing money on the contract. There is also just a simple inertia in business decisions as executives respond to the new situation and eventually take the desired course of action.
The implication of this two- to three-year time lag is that the 300,000-plus jobs that have already been lost in manufacturing are the result of the rise in the dollar up until about 2005 or 2006. We have not yet seen, I would say, even the first part of the industry's adjustment to the subsequent rise in the dollar over the last couple of years. In other words, from the mid-1980s, up to a peak of $1.10 U.S., now it's come back down to roughly parity with the U.S., but that final increase from 85¢ to parity has not yet been felt. That's why we're very pessimistic, if the dollar stays anywhere near its current levels, about the impact on manufacturing employment, and again, similar impacts on other export-oriented industries in Canada.
It's kind of taken for granted these days that our loonie has become a petro-currency—in other words, that it is the run-up in world commodity prices, and in particular the run-up in the world oil price, that explains, and in some sense, justifies the rise of our dollar to such high levels. It is clear that there is a correlation between high oil prices and the level of our dollar, but I think it's worth the committee's while, and for all economists in Canada, to think through exactly how and why high world oil prices actually do impact on the value of our currency.
It is not felt via a traditional trade surplus effect. In older days, economists would have argued that the high global commodity prices, by making our resource exports more valuable, generate a trade surplus, and that's what drives up the value of our currency. In fact, the reverse has happened. Our trade surplus has declined quite dramatically. The most recent numbers, which came out yesterday, were very negative. So it's not being driven by a trade surplus.
In my analysis I've concluded that the main channel of causation between high oil prices and the high value of our dollar is actually felt through corporate financial channels. The very high revenues and profits earned by Canadian mineral companies have increased their market valuations on equity markets and attracted a lot of portfolio investment from other countries, and of course a lot of actual takeovers from other countries. So the tens of billions of dollars that have come into Canada to take over Canadian resource producers is the main factor that has driven up our dollar.
I think it's important for us to recognize those different channels of causation, because they will be relevant to any policy prescriptions that we might recommend in terms of ways to try to bring the dollar back down.
I do want to make reference in my testimony briefly to comments that were made last week by Mr. David Dodge, the Governor of the Bank of Canada. He was quoted in the newspapers and media as suggesting that the dollar in the high nineties, somewhere near parity with the U.S., was in some sense at an appropriate or justified level. I know Mr. Dodge is in the last weeks of his job. You should go easy on someone, I think, as they're getting ready to retire, and he's had a long and illustrious career in public service, so I don't begrudge him that. I take great exception to the statements that Mr. Dodge has made. I don't believe they're economically justified, and I believe they'll do great damage to our industry if in fact currency traders and financial traders take his words as a marker, if you like, and organize their trading activity around them.
The headline in The Toronto Star quoted Dodge's remarks and said, “Dollar about where it should be”. And this direct quote that was reported in The Globe and Mail said:
Now 98 cents sounds very specific. I don't intend it to be nearly that specific, but something in the mid- to upper-90s seemed to be pretty consistent with that.
Those were Mr. Dodge's words. In essence, he's explicitly indicating that the bank is somehow comfortable with an exchange rate that's very close to parity with the U.S.
I've heard this argument made informally from the bank before. I've never heard it so explicitly from the governor. I know where it comes from. They have an econometric model of the Canadian dollar that depends on a number of factors--global commodity prices, the Canada-U.S. interest rate spread, and a couple of other factors. They have been using that model for years to try to explain the value of the dollar. However, it's a very unstable model. The actual importance attached to oil prices in that model depends on what sample period you use to estimate the econometric regression. In fact, in earlier years the same Bank of Canada model found that the high oil prices would have a negative impact on the Canadian dollar, not a positive impact, and the precise level of the Canadian dollar that would prevail at any given time in that model depends on the sample period they have estimated it for.
As you roll that regression over time, the oil price seems to have become more important as a determinant of our dollar. But I don't think that correlation, which is indicated by that Bank of Canada model, in any way implies that the dollar in the high nineties is a logical or sustainable or natural equilibrium level whatsoever. I don't think the Bank of Canada's econometric model is convincing evidence of that.
In my view, the dollar has to come back down to the low eighties in U.S. dollar terms for Canadian industries, including manufacturing, to be at all sustainable in a global market setting. It is in the low eighties where some type of purchasing power parity condition will apply. In other words, the level of prices for consumer goods, or even production inputs in Canada, would then be comparable to those levels prevailing globally. Until the dollar comes back down to that level, which is much more consistent with traditional economic thought than with Mr. Dodge's suggestion that it should stay in the high nineties, Canadian industry will continue to shed jobs by the thousands.
Let me give you one concrete example of how that happens. The auto parts industry is one of Canada's most important manufacturing sectors, which is embedded in utter crisis at this point, with tens of thousands of jobs disappearing and dozens of plants facing closure. Average hourly wages in auto parts in Canada are about $25 an hour. In the U.S. they're about $21 an hour. That means anytime the dollar is above 84¢ U.S., our labour costs in Canada are more expensive than they are in the U.S., and that will exert a continuing downward pressure on production, employment, and investment in Canadian facilities.
The fact that we are paid $25 and the Americans are paid $21 doesn't mean that Canadian workers were greedy, or we somehow demanded too high wages. Over the years, the wages settled at $25 on the basis of Canadian labour market conditions, Canadian consumer prices, productivity levels in our plants, and so on. Now you've had a sudden change in the value of the dollar, which makes us look expensive, even though we're not, and that's destroying tens of thousands of jobs.
Some would say that Canadian plants have to respond to this by becoming more productive. We're all in favour of investment and innovation and productivity growth, but that will not solve the problem. Don't kid yourselves there. A company that develops a new and more productive technology still has the incentive to shift production to the United States anytime the currency is above the level that would equalize our wages.
That's just one example to justify why the dollar has to come back down to the low eighties if our manufacturing sector is to be sustainable at all.
Let me conclude by listing the three policy implications of my analysis of the high dollar.
First, part of the problem clearly rests with the Bank of Canada and its unduly narrow implementation of its inflation-fighting mandate. It does not explicitly take the exchange rate into account in its interest-rate decisions. Clearly, based on Mr. Dodge's remarks last week, the bank is unduly comfortable with an exchange rate in the high nineties, which is still fundamentally unsustainable for our export-oriented industries.
Secondly, I think the federal government has a role to play here in trying to slow down that inflow of foreign capital taking over Canadian resource companies, which in my view has contributed so much to the dollar's dramatic increase. I know there's a committee overlooking the possible reforms to the Investment Canada legislation. I think the imposition of a serious, meaningful, net-benefit test that has to be passed before any foreign takeovers are permitted would help in that regard.
Thirdly, to the extent that we have to live with the high dollar for a while--and I don't accept that in any inevitable way--the federal government and other levels of government have to move forcefully to help the manufacturing sector offset the impacts of that dollar through investment supports and other measures.
Thank you very much for your patience with me.