Thank you, Chair.
Thank you, witnesses. This is very interesting.
I want to focus on what are the challenges and the hurdles for Canadian retail businesses in getting involved with online sales. You've mentioned that 5% of retail sales are online. I think you said it was 10% in the U.S., and that is improving, but very slowly. What are those hurdles?
I'd like to share an anecdote. Things are constantly changing if you're in business. Death and taxes are secure, and you know that's happening, but if you don't change with the times, I think you may be a dinosaur. I'm thinking back to way before your time, when there was a washing machine called the “wringer washer”. It didn't have a spin cycle. It had wringers or rollers that you put the clothes through to squeeze out the water. Those washers became obsolete, but a number of people still had them, and probably about 40 years ago the wringer washers all died: they broke, and they wore out, and people weren't getting them repaired anymore because they didn't compare with the new technology.
We have a changing technology now, and the anecdote I want to share with you is about a very successful bridal boutique in the Fraser Valley. What's happening now is that a prospective bride will go in there and try on different dresses. She'll try on a dress and say that it's fine, that she likes this dress, this model, in this size; she uses up the store's time, the staff time, and then she'll buy it online. They are being forced into competing with themselves. There are two prices. There's the sale price in the store, where you're getting the service, but if they do not provide a competitive price, they won't get the sale. This is the challenge they're faced with: eventually you go to the lower denominator.
Today we go into stores that used to have a lot of sales help, but it's not there any more. A bridal boutique like this may not survive. To survive, they may have to start selling online, but they can't even do that if the manufacturer is selling directly to the customer: you go right from wholesale to retail with no middleman. Things are changing.
What are the hurdles for businesses like this boutique or 95% of Canadian business? I heard from that person when they were in a consultation process when the Prime Minister went on pre-budget consultations; I heard their story. Another common problem was that the wholesale price Canadian retailers have to pay is at times more expensive than what the U.S. market is retailing for, because of tariffs. That's another issue. You have shipping and tariffs.
What is the future for Canadian retailers? What are the hurdles?