Thank you, Madam Chair.
Mr. Walker, happy Agriculture Day.
Canadian farmers are very small in number, but they all make us proud. They have made Canada the fifth-largest exporter of agricultural produce and agri-food products in the world. The prosperity that we enjoy today is mainly due to the trade that the farmers and others export. I think 67.4% of the GDP in 2022 came from international trade, so it is international trade that gives us the prosperity that we enjoy today.
For us, every single trade agreement is important. We have about 15 trade agreements with about 51 countries, accounting for about 60% of the world's GDP, and we need more of that. Every small bit counts.
We also need to diversify from the exports that we are focused on. We are trading mostly with our biggest neighbour, the U.S., and we need to diversify our exports. That is one reason why we need to have as many trade agreements as possible with different countries in different parts of the world.
To hear some people—not my colleagues here, but some of the witnesses—seem to indicate that we should not have trade negotiations until certain conditions are met, many times they don't understand that the trade agreement is required, especially for countries like Ecuador. Though it is an upper-middle income country, it is still a developing country. There are still a lot of people in the poor and lower-income group, and trade agreements like this will stimulate economic investments.
It has become very fashionable in Canada to pick on our mining companies. Our mining companies take their corporate responsibility quite seriously. However, I do agree that there are mining companies in poor or developing countries that are from other countries and that exploit where they set up the mines. To apply the same...and paint the Canadian mining companies with the same brush, I think is not good for Canada.
I think we forget that the trade agreements and the investments from the agriculture companies or the mining companies not only stimulate economic growth where they are investing, but they also provide for the development of social infrastructure, from roads and schools to power generation.
When I was growing up, in my country we did not have trade agreements. Every summer I used to spend two months in our village where we did not have toilets or running water. I wish the country had trade agreements where foreign investors could have come and invested in the local economy, creating jobs and helping economic improvement.
Mr. Walker, I'll come back to the agriculture sector.
Ecuador is maybe a small market. Tell me, how does it help in the medium to longer term to stimulate Canadian exposure to the region as a whole?