Thank you.
Thank you, Mr. Chair and members of the committee, for inviting us to discuss the TPP with you this morning.
The Fédération des chambres de commerce du Québec is a group of 140 chambers of commerce and is the most prominent network of business people and companies in Quebec. Founded in 1909, the FCCQ today represents more than 60,000 businesses and 150,000 business people with activities in every economic sector and across Quebec. The FCCQ is both a federation of chambers of commerce and the Quebec chamber of commerce, the provincial chamber.
On various occasions, the FCCQ has privately and publicly expressed its support for various planned free trade agreements. That is easily understood. In Quebec, international exports account for 25.7% of the GDP, and the sales to other Canadian provinces are responsible for 19% of the GDP. This means that more than 40% of our economy is related to the production of goods and services for markets other than Quebec.
The FCCQ therefore recognizes from the start the importance of agreements that remove tariffs and other barriers that impede access to domestic and international markets for Quebec's goods and services.
The draft Trans-Pacific Partnership agreement seeks to remove 18,000 tariffs. That's significant. Those customs duties and other tariff barriers are affecting a lot of Quebec and Canadian exports. Just think of the metals and minerals, industrial machinery, the agricultural materials, the construction equipment, the pharmaceutical products, and the information and communications technologies, just to name a few.
For the FCCQ, the benefits for our businesses come from better access to external markets and exceed the losses from opening the domestic market to foreign goods and services. Clearly, the TPP broadens the access to some markets and points to new growth prospects for our businesses. But that will not happen by itself. We must take proactive action to be on the winning side of those exchanges.
Free trade agreements are and will be beneficial to the Canadian economy to the extent that businesses can, and will be able to, market innovative, world-class products and services. Government support for innovation is therefore an essential tool for exporting companies. The latest federal budget recognizes it and announces that, in 2016-2017, the government will define a bold new plan in its innovation agenda. The plan must include assistance for businesses aiming at export markets.
The federation is urging the federal government to make its directions known as soon as possible in terms of innovation and measures that will stimulate business investment in innovation. The FCCQ is of the opinion that assistance measures must be more targeted for businesses and investors, in order to promote measures that make it possible to be more productive and compete for new markets.
That is particularly important for the manufacturing sector. Companies in the manufacturing sector have certainly been stimulated by the declining price of oil and the weak Canadian dollar, although we think it is still very modest. However, their sales went up by over 5% in 2014. But those sales are still lower than they were before the recession in 2009 and 2010.
Let's now talk about the importance of keeping small and medium-sized businesses informed.
Large companies are well aware of the challenges of world trade and they have the ability to quickly react to changes resulting from a free trade agreement. In the exchanges that the federation regularly holds with companies, especially small and medium-sized companies, we are noticing significant gaps in terms of information and education about the challenges of the new trade agreements. Without the right information, those businesses are not sufficiently prepared to take advantage of the new markets or to deal with the new competitors on traditional markets.
Until the TPP is ratified, it would be desirable for the Canadian government to devote resources to informing businesses about the short- and medium-term opportunities and challenges presented by the implementation of this potential agreement. The government could benefit from using a network like the federation's to reach Quebec's small and medium-sized businesses.
There is also the issue of the sensitivity of the agri-food sector. As Agropur has explained, the agri-food sector often represents the sensitive part of bilateral or multilateral trade agreements. The TPP is one more instance of that.
The TPP would partially open supply-managed agricultural markets to foreign countries over a five-year period. At the end of the five years, foreign producers will be able to take over up to 3.25% of the dairy market. That percentage will be 2.3% for eggs, 0.1% for chicken, 2% for turkey and 1.5% for broiler hatching eggs.