Mr. Speaker, I think one of the biggest features of our currency and its value today has to do with uncertainty. A lot of the uncertainty has been created by people across the way.
The Bloc motion alludes to the desire of the separatist movement to copy the European Union. As we know, European countries have come together to create a common currency. I think it is appropriate that we ask ourselves why they did that. Basically the reason is that they wanted to lessen their sovereignty because their history has not been a happy one.
We can think of the two world wars and how nationalism devastated some of those economies. People who have travelled to Berlin or Warsaw have seen that most of the buildings date from the 1950s. It does not take a lot of thought to realize what the sovereignist movement in Europe has done. The people have said they are trading sovereignty for economic growth and stability. They want to come together to have a common currency. As other speakers have mentioned, there are 11 independent countries. The thought process is quite different in Europe than it is in North America.
We talk about currency as if it is unique. People have traded in coins. Indeed in this country we have used beaver pelts. Seashells have been used in other places. These things only represent a modicum of the exchange between people. The important thing is the value of the trading relationship.
Members of the Bloc seem to think this is entirely in reverse, that somehow exchange rates influence productivity. In fact productivity and the underlying economics that exist in the country reflect the exchange rates, not the other way around.
I will deal with the issue of a Pan-American monetary union.
Other members have alluded to the reality that within the North American structure economic forces are divergent. We know that our neighbour to the south dominates the economy of North America.
I looked at the Canadian Almanac today because I was interested in what the comparative economic relationships would be in North America. The GDP of the province of Quebec is about $185 billion. That represents approximately 20% of Canada's GDP. The U.S. GDP, on the other hand, is something like $6.740 trillion. These figures do not include Mexico. Quebec's economic strength just within the United States and Canada would be less than 2%.
Do these people really think they are going to have some say about currency evaluations when they would only have 2% of the economy in the Pan-American relationship? I doubt that. I think we all know fundamentally that if we entered into an agreement like that we would not be controlling the foreign exchange of currency calculations, it would be someone in Washington.
It seems odd to me that separatists would actually bend themselves out of shape. Now they want to give up their sovereignty movement and make themselves simply a fiefdom of the United States.
Why do we have our own independent foreign exchange rate and currency? It allows us to manage the economy. The exchange rate actually represents the underlying economic forces. It allows us to adjust foreign exchange rates to deal with certain shocks that occur in the economy.
Right now we are living through a period in which commodity prices are depressed in world markets. Unfortunately Canada is very susceptible to that because a significant portion of our economy is related to commodity pricing. Commodity pricing has changed through global forces which are quite often beyond our control. Russia has been dumping commodity prices and the demand in southeast Asia has also declined. These have all had an impact on commodities in Canada.
Governments have choices. Do we change our foreign exchange rate, our internal currency, or do we try to maintain an artificially high exchange rate? I would suggest, in the wonderful fairyland of the Bloc, that if it had an American currency, suddenly that economic tool would no longer exist. The only ways one could adjust for economic forces would be through unemployment and high interest rates.
This is a commodity based economy to some extent, but in the same almanac it was interesting to see the breakdown of the province of Quebec and how the GDP figure is arrived at. It basically stated: primary manufacturing, electric power, mining and pulp and paper. Quite frankly, those are all commodity based industries.
What members opposite are proposing is to adopt a Pan-American currency, the result of which, under our current economic conditions, would be increased unemployment in the province of Quebec and increased local interest rates. On top of that, it would also reduce their sovereignty.
I find it quite incredible that this is the debate that the Bloc has brought forward to us today.
It is strange to have this kind of misguided approach to foreign exchange. I was also surprised to find that the Conservative Party supports this.
I think back to the history of this country, of John A. Macdonald, the building of the great railway and the national dreams. What has happened to them? They have become so demented along the way that we are now accepting a separatist agenda to reduce Canadian sovereignty at the behest of our big brothers to the south? It is a sad day indeed for the House of Commons when we have to go that full circle.
Speaker after speaker from the Bloc has given us an economics 101 lesson. I find it quite incredible that somehow we are in bad shape in this country because of our foreign exchange rates.
I was greatly pleased to go to the unveiling of the KPMG book that everybody has been talking about recently. It states that Canada is number one in the world with respect to its competitive position. Yes, foreign exchange is part of that. They say that at a 79 cent dollar Canada will start to lose that competitive position.
These people are suggesting that somehow we enter into a monetary union, the net effect of which would be that we would lose our competitive position that we now have, and at the demise of the province of Quebec I might add. From sector to sector, from the software sector to the high tech sector, Canada has been rated as the number one place in the world to do business. I do not think we want to give up that competitive position just at some whim of the Bloc which is totally misguided. It does not even seem to suit the Bloc's own agenda.
We should be celebrating the fact that the Canadian economy is robust. It has the opportunity to be competitive in world markets. I would encourage all members of the House, including those in the Conservative Party, to stand up four square and object to losing our sovereignty and losing our ability to make our own economic decisions.