The real problem is not for companies of our scale. For instance, I'm guessing we would have probably 40 sales people who work directly for us in three offices in China. Your average small Canadian company is not going to be able to mount that kind of sales effort.
But here is my worry. My worry is how we support, both as a business community and as a government, the development of small businesses, not just in Atlantic Canada and not just in the fishing industry but in all industries right across the country.
It used to be, 30 years ago, that you could have a reasonably successful business that only did business in Canada.; it didn't have to compete with anyone else. Now virtually any successful business in Canada cannot be successful if it isn't globally competitive. This is not to say that it has to do business everywhere in the world; it's just that it has to withstand the competitive influence of people from elsewhere in the world. Look at companies such as Walmart, which now sources 30% of its products from China.
My point is that the regulatory environment has to be supportive. It has to provide for opportunities. We cannot, for instance, let the issues that almost derailed our entry into the Trans-Pacific trade talks, the issues that were thrown up by the supply side folks.... Think about the hypocrisy of a country taking the position that it is globally competitive in meat products and globally competitive in grains, but not in dairy, so we want you to let us trade freely in wheat and meat products and all the other things we're really competitive in, but we want a protected market in those uncompetitive products. That's an enormously hypocritical position for a country to take, and obviously it's not going to get us into trade agreements.
You need somebody to say that we need to do the right thing for the country. The right thing for the country is to move forward and tell the dairy industry, if it's a protected industry, that it needs to become competitive and that there will be some dislocation.
Now, do we need to be their partner and help them through that dislocation? Yes, that's the role of government. We need to figure out how we can help the dairy industry be competitive.
Do you know why? It's because the average Canadian should not be paying a premium for milk. Why should we be doing that? It's ridiculous, when you think about it. There is a cost.
Again, it gets back to having to engage with the world and having to understand that change is just a part of the medicine when trying to improve and trying to grow the economy.