Madam Speaker, I am pleased to rise today to speak to Bill C-19, an act to implement the Agreement on Internal Trade.
To those of us in Quebec, this bill is both very significant and very encouraging. For a number of years, I would say more than ten even, we have been discussing the possibility of freeing trade among Canada's provinces. Today, we are proud to see that the government has acted on it.
It is vital to harmonizing trade relations, and I will explain in detail a little later on why we agree with harmonizing trade relations among the provinces. We freed trade with the United States first, before we freed trade among the provinces. You can imagine how important it was to do so.
It is also important to have a dispute resolution mechanism. We find this mechanism quite acceptable, except as we mentioned at the bill's earlier stages, and as we discussed with Quebec officials, it is a bit odd in our free trade agreement with the United States that the parties-Canada and the U.S.-have to decide as the very last thing how a dispute between firms or sectors of the economy is to be resolved.
In the end, the federal government will decide by order in council where disputes will be settled. In other words, it will unilaterally decide what is right and what is not.
This is why we, together with my colleague who was then the industry critic, had suggested a two day debate in the House of Commons on the importance of dispute settlement. We believe, as I said earlier, that some sectors might be more affected in some provinces than in others and that if a dispute was settled by order in council, it could be unfair at times to economic sectors which might be in a more favourable position in one province than in others.
This is why we believe that settling a dispute by order in council might be harmful to certain economic sectors and to certain provinces, especially the small ones.
Interprovincial free trade is of the utmost importance. Already, trade in goods and services in Canada and in Quebec represents 16 per cent of the gross domestic product of Quebec, for instance. It is quite important for Quebec to have free competition with the rest of Canada.
For instance, we can say products that Quebec sells in the rest of Canada represent $23.3 billion. The goods we purchase from other provinces represent $19 billion. That means we sell a little more in the other provinces than we buy from them.
However, we sell $11 billion in services to the other provinces, and we buy $14 billion from them. We buy about $3 billion more in services than we sell. So, if we look at the total average, what we sell and what we buy is about equal.
If the government had not acted by liberalizing trade between the provinces, we could see that Quebec would have further developed its trade with the United States. We will continue to do so with the United States because, particularly in Quebec, we have an extraordinary market with the cities of New York, Boston and Buffalo, in the United States, and with Toronto, in Canada. We have a tremendous market. In a radius of about 1,000 kilometres, there are almost 100 million consumers.
For Quebec, it is very beneficial to work at the shortest distance possible. We have an extraordinary market. New York and Boston, the northeastern United States, is the richest region in the world; it is where consumers buy the most. That is also where the business culture is the most like ours, so that it is much easier for us to do business in this radius. It requires much less effort, much less research on the human behaviour level, on the cultural level, etc. It is much simpler. Quebec will pursue its efforts to develop these markets, which have become much easier to break into. The figures I just gave you are based on the year 1994.
For all these reasons, our ultimate goal is to achieve Quebec sovereignty and negotiate an economic partnership with the rest of Canada. The government is to be thanked for this initiative. It is a step in the right direction. As we proposed during the referendum, we want to negotiate an economic partnership with the rest of Canada. What we have done, what we are doing today is a step forward that will help us achieve our goals when Quebec becomes sovereign. In this regard, I think we have just taken an extraordinary step.
There are other reasons, for example the advantage of liberalizing trade with the other provinces and the U.S. The economy is changing and will change even more dramatically in the future. We face an extraordinary, an exciting challenge in the coming years. The new ways of communicating, high technology, robotics, computers, the electronic highway are all transforming the dynamics of the economy.
That is why borders should disappear, so that everyone can benefit from their own intellectual and technical resources. I would like to say a few words on this, if I have the time.
I will deal mainly with our economy of the past 50 years-there is no need to go back to ancient history-for those sceptics who think that free competition and free trade at the international level are bad for us.
For those sceptics, I would like to go over the economy of the past and that of the future. In my days as a Conservative member, I took a strong stand for free trade with the United States. I worked very hard to make it happen. That is why, thinking back on all the speeches we made, the studies we commissioned and the evidence we heard, I am convinced that free trade is a good thing.
For the benefit of those who remain sceptical, I will raise the issue of competition. Let us not forget that, in the old days, our main markets were wood, fur and iron. We also had a very domestic farm industry. We raised our livestock to meet our immediate needs. We also had coal, petroleum, in very limited supplies, and all naturally renewable commodities, which ensured our survival locally.
When we had plentiful supplies of natural products such as coal, iron, wood and so on, we sold some and used some. Revenues were relatively stable. In the old days, the economy was relatively stable because it was driven for the most part by natural resources.
Wood was used to build houses and to heat them, livestock was killed for its meat and cows gave milk. All this makes for a very local economy. To keep warm, people burned wood; that is quite simple. They did not have much need for trading with Ontario or the U.S. to feed themselves, heat their homes and what not. Theirs was a strictly local economy. We had an enormous wealth, particularly in Quebec, but also in the other provinces, of materials of all sorts.
In a way, it was quite important to take protective measures. In those days, Canadians were very afraid of having their market invaded by the Americans or the Europeans, of anything that might destabilize their economy. It was therefore important that barriers be erected to protect our small local economy.
We tended to be protectionists. Barriers were erected. Customs tariffs and tariffs of all sorts were imposed to prevent our economy from being disturbed in any way. For decades, I would even go as far as to say centuries, our economy remained virtually unchanged. We were undoubtedly protectionists, and probably rightly so.
As far as national and international markets is concerned, as I said earlier, we did not really need to rely on other countries to provide for our needs.
Our multinationals set up mainly in countries where natural resources were vast and where labour was cheap. Products were made, finished and then sold. This is how the economy and the multinationals used to work. These businesses would go in countries where they could produce at a low cost, thanks to the natural resources and cheap labour available.
In the sixties, seventies and eighties, governments would get involved when they realized that a business was experiencing financial troubles or productivity problems, among others, and they would subsidize these companies. It was easy for companies to get subsidies. A lot of money was spent to subsidize businesses. I clearly remember, and so do other members who take an interest in the economy, that enormous amounts of money were used to subsidize companies, until governments realized that they were just wasting our money.
Generally speaking, when companies were in financial difficulty, it was because they had not properly analyzed future markets, changes affecting labour and technology, automation, and all sorts of new ways of doing things. This was the main reason these companies had problems and were helped out by governments, which were essentially wasting money. Indeed, even though they were subsidized, these companies still ended up shutting down.
They were subsidized because they were located in remote areas. However, they were not suitable for the region, sometimes because the natural resources were no longer as abundant as when they had first settled there. In any case, this resulted in a lot of money being wasted.
Let us now look at the current economy. To those who are sceptical and who believe that free trade is something bad which will hurt us, let me say that I think just the opposite, and I have for several years now. The economy in which we live, and in which we will live in the years to come, is based on ideas rather than on natural resources.
Mental competence will be very important. In Quebec in particular, we have tremendous intellectual competence, and young people graduating from our schools, colleges and universities are outstanding. With regard to software development, in particular, we see that we are among the best in the world. The economy of the future will be based a lot more on mental competence than on natural resources, as used to be the case. The information highway is a case in point. There is much talk about it now.
People with the capacity to develop software and to use it for promotion, sale or information, whether through the Internet or other means of communications, will be in the forefront and will do well. This economy will be based on ideas, on mental competence.
Thanks to this new way of doing business with ideas and mental competence, the economy will change a lot more rapidly. We will witness an economic revolution that could be considered astounding by some, but which I would see instead as a particularly exciting new development. As you know, ideas evolve a lot faster than coal or iron plants. Ideas change, evolve at a rapid pace.
Previously, the economy was based on natural resources like coal and iron. We could rely on our resources, we had plenty of them for 50 or 100 years. We lived off them, we had only to extract and sell them, it was not complicated.
Tomorrow's economy will be much more flexible and will move much faster. It will change more rapidly, and I think it will be very exciting for young people.
Help from governments will be different too. Governments will help companies to better communicate and sell their products, get international information and international market intelligence, and assess world markets. Government help will also target certain sectors of the economy.
Small businesses may need information, for example. It will be important for the government to have experts throughout the world that can use Internet to let that small business acquire some knowledge of what the culture is like in India, of what the lifestyle of the Indians, the Japanese or the Chinese is like, and on how they go about purchasing goods or services. So the government will
have an important role to play in conveying to small businesses the information they require in order to develop.
This is the economy of the future, and it is important to realize it. I think we do, but governments will have to be flexible. That is why Quebec is looking for more autonomy. We want to be flexible in order to move quickly. We think that federalism, with its eleven governments, is doomed to stagnation. It stifles development. The government is always slow to move and takes a lot of time to react. That is why we advocate sovereignty with an economic and political partnership with the rest of Canada. In order to expand, we need to be able to react more quickly and to be more efficient as a government in our support for this new approach.
I mentioned earlier that more accessible markets will mean a lot more transfers, not only of products but also of skills. Transfers of skills do not cost much in transportation fees. It can be done through computers. It will be done in the future through the Internet and more user friendly communication services.
We are told that we will soon be able to contact anyone in the world without having to make long distance calls. We will not have to call long distance to talk to someone in Japan or in China in the near future, in just a few years from now. It means we will be able to exchange ideas and work on research or other projets with experts from anywhere in the world.
This is why free trade with the United States, with the provinces and with other large markets is so interesting. It will allow us to be more efficient. Our productivity will increase and who will benefit in the end? The consumer.
We will have good high-quality products. We will definitely be able to increase the standard of living of our citizens. It can take us far, but I just wanted to show that an opening onto the world, with freer trade and increased competitiveness, should help to improve our productivity. In turn, it should improve our products and result in a higher standard of living for consumers and the general public.
We will have better and nicer clothes. We will have nicer automobiles and television sets with interactive programming. We will be able to afford a lot of things. We need high technology, but, in some cases, it can cost a lot of money.
When we were negotiating free trade with the United States, some major international investors told us: "We need large markets to justify our investments". People stopped investing in Canada for two main reasons. First, they told us: "The market is not big enough to justify our investments. Besides, Canada's debt is too high and we will have to pay for it. It will be too expensive and, in the end, it will not be profitable to invest in Canada".
High technology has its advantages, but it can sometimes be expensive. It costs a lot of money to invent a high technology product, which means that large investments are required, and you need markets to make these investments profitable. Not only did Canada have a very small market of about 25 million people, but companies were not sure they would be able to sell their products in other provinces. So you can imagine how restricted our market was. Very few people were interested in investing in Canada because the market was too small to justify the investment. Consequently, international investors in high technology went to Europe, to the United States, to Japan and other countries.
For these reasons, it was really necessary to secure free trade with the United States. It was hard because Quebec was almost the only province in favour of free trade with the United States. We, Quebecers, worked very hard because we believed in free trade with the United States. There was unanimity in Quebec between the Liberal Party, the Parti Quebecois and a majority of Conservative members at the time. We worked real hard, and it is with the help of Quebecers that we succeeded in signing a free-trade agreement with the United States.
Except for Mr. Turner, the Liberal Party at the time was against free trade with the United States. Only Mr. Turner, the former Prime Minister, was in favour of free trade. He came to the House to make a speech in support of free trade. He contradicted the present Prime Minister, who was against it.