Okay.
After FIRA was dissolved, domestic ownership went up. Today, almost 50% of the industry is owned by Canadian-based companies that can freely access global capital, and many of those Canadian companies are globally competitive.
Today, most Canadians recognize that our economy has matured and that ideas and approaches that may have helped us in the last century won't work in the 21st century. Most Canadians understand that Canada can and should compete with the global community to attract the investment that leads to innovation, jobs, and long-term prosperity, while building Canadian entrepreneurs and companies that can compete at home and abroad.
We are the most reliant nation on foreign trade when measured against our GDP. It is in our DNA to be able to survive and thrive in the international marketplace. As essential as a modern and competitive telecommunications marketplace is to the digital economy, there is just no rationale for erecting barriers to the investment and foreign players that we require to achieve our own ambitions. Indeed, we should signal to the international investment marketplace that Canada, with its strong currency, enviable fiscal situation, vibrant labour pool, and access to the massive NAFTA marketplace, is committed to growth through investment and to being an incubator of next-generation communications networks and enterprises.
The investment equation for large incumbents versus competitors is very different. Competitor investment, which is crucial to greater competition, lower price, and greater choice, especially in the business market, is entirely risk-based. The stakes are higher, the risks are greater, and the necessary risk capital far less available from Canadian sources. As a result, competitors have often been reliant on foreign debt, and, for the past number of years, largely absent.
Conversely, the large incumbents, whose ubiquitous networks were in significant measure funded by the foreign capital now not available to competitors, can leverage their economies of scale and free cashflow to significantly but incrementally invest in their existing networks. This investment is inherently less risky and consequently inherently more attractive to Canadian sources of investment.
The consequences of this asymmetry are tangible. Our small and medium-sized business community in particular is characterized by lagging innovation and adoption of new technologies, which is directly linked to their lack of competitive choice for next-generation telecom services. For example, Canadian retailers lag their U.S. counterparts by about four years in online sales, according to Statistics Canada.
Our goal in opening up investment in our telecommunications industry is clearly to encourage the development of leading-edge infrastructure. In today's environment, that infrastructure transmits to Canadian consumers telecommunications services and TV signals. To be clear, the government can and should lift the foreign investment restrictions related to this carriage, while retaining the ability to regulate content, and indeed continue, if necessary, to restrict investment in broadcasters and programming licensees.
There is no slippery slope here. There is a clear line between content, on the one hand, and carriage on the other. Consequently, it is, in our view, indisputable that the proper policy, legislative, and regulatory tools can be employed in support of the important objectives of protecting and promoting Canadian content and culture.
No doubt, as when the government moved to open up the wireless market to greater competition, there will be resistance from those whose interests favour the status quo. However, the status quo doesn't serve our national interest or the interests of Canadian business and consumers. The status quo has led to higher prices, the slower adoption of new technologies, and less choice.
We commend you on your review of this important set of issues and urge you to take action to assist in Canada becoming a more competitive, productive, and innovative nation.
I apologize for my pace.