That's fair enough. Thank you very much.
Ms. Campbell, thanks for your compliments to our former chair and also your welcome to our new chair, who will be a great addition to our committee as well. I know that Mr. Merrifield will be working at representing not only Alberta but Canada. He's a great Canadian at heart.
Looking at this from a Canadian perspective, I thank you for your handout this morning, the Canadian Council of Chief Executives' annual report. In there, you made these comments:
Canada concluded a free trade pact with South Korea after nearly a decade of negotiations. The deal represents a watershed in Canada's efforts to forge closer economic ties in Asia and will create new opportunities to sell Canadian products in one of the world's fastest-growing advanced economies.
You go on to say:
In 2014, Canada will pass an important milestone: exports are expected to catch up with and surpass the levels seen prior to the 2008 recession. Better still, our country appears poised for an export boom in the years ahead. With one in five Canadian jobs dependant on trade, this is encouraging news for Canadian workers.
I share those sentiments totally. One of the comments we've had in discussions around the table—I've been on the committee for eight and a half years—is on the issue of looking at monthly stats as they point to the trade deficits. Often, the headlines are alarming Canadians about our shrinking trade deficit for that month, but I think that overall the narrowing trade gap, which you've referred to, means a better-performing economy. It's not always reflected in the immediate economic performance numbers. I'd say that almost the inverse is true, because GDP improves when a trade deficit exists, at times.
There was a comment you had on a blog, “Canada's trade deficit: understanding the big picture”. You stated, “While persistent trade deficits over a number of years may spell trouble in certain circumstances, Canada is very far from being in that situation.” To improve the trade balance, the organization has pointed to certain key factors, including the foreign direct investment and earning world prices on our energy resources, as well as pursuing robust trade opportunities with the Americas and Asia, including China, India, Japan, and South Korea, which we know are all economic indicators that our government has acted on as part of our GMAP strategy and which it believes are important to our local and national economies.
My question for you would be for the benefit of my constituents and for all Canadians. As we point to the trade deficits perspective on the Canadian economy, could you elaborate on this issue, perhaps sharing with us what factors influence the numbers, what the statistics don't tell us about trade in different sectors, and what we need to do to ensure Canada's overall economic health? There's a combination of questions in there, but I think there's something from your blog and comments in the past that maybe would help clarify it for the committee.