{"id":4117,"date":"1944-09-01T01:00:00","date_gmt":"1944-09-01T01:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/september-1944-vol-25-no-9\/"},"modified":"2023-12-04T14:46:30","modified_gmt":"2023-12-04T14:46:30","slug":"september-1944-vol-25-no-9","status":"publish","type":"rbc_letter","link":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/september-1944-vol-25-no-9\/","title":{"rendered":"September 1944 &#8211; Vol. 25, No. 9 &#8211; International Trade"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"layout-column-main\">\n<p class=\"boldtext\">At a time when the nations are gladly making                     plans for peace, it is of the greatest importance to think                     seriously of international trade. War production has been                     a wonderful achievement in all the United Nations. Looking                     beyond it, business enterprise sees no more pressing problem                     than that of laying plans for utilization of its war-developed                     capacity to create goods. The ideal sought is fullest employment                     of the economic resources of all countries, with rising living                     standards in all countries, and maximum trade between all                     countries.<\/p>\n<p> The purpose of commerce is to transfer certain commodities                     from those who do not need them to others who do. Foreign                     trade is necessary both to sell surpluses and to obtain essential                     goods not produced locally. It is illogical to speak of any                     balance of trade as being favourable to a nation, because                     the cost of imports ~s exports. The purchases that a country                     can make are limited by the value of the goods and services                     it can sell. International trade enables countries and localities                     to develop the industries best suited to them, and it helps                     to raise consumption by enabling consumers to take advantage                     of specialization in economic activities.<\/p>\n<p>To sell a big quantity of exports a country must be prepared                     to buy a big quantity of import products. Only half of the                     power of commerce resides within the nation, and the whole                     business is as effectually ruined by destroying half as by                     attacking the whole. When the ability of any nation to buy                     is impaired, it equally involves the seller. A recent pronouncement                     of the Canadian Chamber of Commerce said: &#8220;No nation can afford                     to lose sight of the fundamental principle that international                     commerce is an exchange of goods and services for goods and                     services.&#8221; Foreign trade is not founded upon selfishness,                     but upon participation. No country should approach post-war                     commerce with the idea that it is primarily a measure to avert                     a depression or create employment. Effective world demand                     will automatically make full use of the world&#8217;s manpower and                     resources, but the basic target is the maximum satisfaction                     of human needs.<\/p>\n<p>The United Nations are tackling international trade in an                     open-minded and forward-looking way. They recognize                     as a first requirement that the nations of the world must                     have freedom from fear of war, and this can only be assured                     through some form of co-operative guarantee. Next need                     is for commercial stability, so that business can plan confidently                     for future development. There must be monetary stability and                     the provision of credit. To set up the functional machinery                     for all these is the task being undertaken by a dozen agencies.                     There is no room in such a picture for the isolation attitude                     of mind, nor for clashes of sectional interest. The world                     is not merely an aggregate of unrelated units, but is, in                     effect, a single economic system. It is impossible to shelter                     internally from world trade fluctuations merely by contracting                     the range of our economy. Few people who now applaud policies                     of self-sufficiency would be prepared to return to conditions                     that surrounded primitive groups which were able to maintain                     themselves without outside contacts. Their standard of living                     was low, social gains were slight, spiritual values were practically                     nil, and there was no education worth the name.<\/p>\n<p>Most business men, and it is business men who have made                     the closest study of international trade, believe that an                     attempt to impose economic blockades around Canada would inevitably                     lower the living standards of the people. They believe government                     regulation that was necessary in wartime should be sensibly                     decreased. Government action in peace should be confined to                     keeping the machinery in good working order, correcting or                     preventing abuses, co-ordinating international practices,                     acting as a channel for the co-operation of exporters                     whereby contact may be made with prospective importers, and                     suchlike directional and helpful efforts.<\/p>\n<h3>Need for Commerce<\/h3>\n<p>If there are not to be weeds growing in the streets of tomorrow,                     this is the time to make plans. Canadian manufacturers, who                     have greatly expanded their production facilities since the                     war started, realize that domestic markets will not absorb                     the increased output. Many have ventured into foreign trade                     as something new, since shortages in other countries have                     turned orders toward Canada. These producers are properly                     considering the methods by which they may continue their trading                     after the war, and their fortune is a matter of concern to                     everyone in the Dominion. Success would mean an increase in                     individual security on the healthiest possible lines &#8211; based                     upon personal prosperity arising out of pay for work done.                     It would bring lower prices, because large-scale exports                     would mean large-scale production. The reduction in price                     would cause increased consumption, with consequent increased                     employment. If, on the other hand, our exporting industries                     fail, it will not be only the exporting industries that are                     hurt; it will be the whole economy.<\/p>\n<p>In outlining to Parliament last month the steps to be taken                     by Canada in its post-war planning, the Minister of Finance                     placed &#8220;stimulation and expansion of export trade&#8221; first.                     Standards of living and individual prosperity are based upon                     the nation&#8217;s pay envelopes. Manufacturers are confronted with                     the tremendous problem of how they are to retain markets or                     find new markets to enable them to continue paying wages amounting                     to $40 million a week. Part of the answer, at any rate, is                     in commerce. The dollars resulting from export trade are not                     just figures in a book, but hard cash. After passing through                     the hands of the workmen who produce the goods for which it                     pays, this cash becomes available for expansion, for purchasing                     foreign goods, and for reducing indebtedness.<\/p>\n<p>As has been mentioned in preceding Letters in this series,                     Canada is far from being a self-sufficient country. There                     is a large proportion of unproductive area, there are seasonable                     handicaps, and, at least up to this war, there were only a                     few specialized exports. On the prairies, we produce the world&#8217;s                     best wheat with less expenditure of labour and capital than                     nearly any other part of the world; our northern forests are                     particularly suitable for making newsprint; our mines yield                     many times as much precious metal as we can use; and our hydro-electric                     power resources are the envy of the world. On the other side                     of the ledger, we are short of coal, iron, oil and tin; we                     cannot produce tropical fruits, cotton and other fibres. The                     Royal Commission on Dominion Provincial Relations reported                     in 1940: &#8220;Every country could display a list of surplus and                     deficit resources, but in few would both sides of the balance                     sheet contain such basically important products in such volume,                     and in few would the extremes be so great.\u00a0&#8230;Because                     Canada is one of the least self-sufficient countries                     in the world, her prosperity and her very existence depend                     on making the most of her own specialized resources, and on                     trading them as advantageously as possible for her other requirements.&#8221;<\/p>\n<h3>National Income<\/h3>\n<p>To maintain a national income on the scale needed to sustain                     employment and the standard of living to which Canadians have                     now attained, this country must have a great volume of export                     trade. Between the two world wars, Canada&#8217;s exports represented                     an average 30 to 35 per cent of her national income, while                     less than 10 per cent of the United States national income                     accrued from export business.<\/p>\n<p>It is interesting to note the correspondence between export                     figures and national income. Since the first settlement of                     Canada, there has been only one period when the size of Canada&#8217;s                     income has not kept pace with the size of Canada&#8217;s exports.                     The economist, Gilbert Jackson, declares &#8220;twelve months of                     exporting on a large scale and at a profit have always been                     followed by twelve months of prosperity. The reverse is equally                     true.&#8221; There is a great resemblance between the figures showing                     national income and domestic exports. Changes in the total                     of exports are followed in the succeeding year by corresponding                     changes in the national income. This correspondence is remarkably                     close. Over the 15 years preceding 1940 it was 93 per cent,                     and over a longer period it was almost 100 per cent.<\/p>\n<p>Canada&#8217;s periods of greatest prosperity, when standards                     of living are highest and employment is at its peak, coincide                     with periods of world prosperity. Mr. Jackson goes so far                     as to declare: &#8220;The relationship between exports and the national                     income is definite and graduated,&#8221; and he says that three                     dollars&#8217; worth of exports add just about five dollars to the                     national income, above the small basic minimum that we could                     achieve if we traded only with one another inside Canada.                     The President of the Canadian Federation of Agriculture told                     a parliamentary committee in July: &#8220;Canadian agriculture has                     been developed on an export basis, with normally the products                     from one out of three acres in our improved acreage going                     abroad. Since trade is a two-way proposition, Canada                     must be prepared to buy goods from those countries which provide                     a continuous outlet for our exportable agricultural production.&#8221;                     The crop years 1937, 1938 and 1939 illustrate Canada&#8217;s great                     dependence upon export agricultural markets, relative to the                     United States. United States&#8217; exports of wheat in those years                     amounted to 12, 11 and 6 per cent of production, while Canada&#8217;s                     wheat exports were 52, 46 and 40 per cent of production.<\/p>\n<p>From the standpoint of the whole nation, the purpose of                     trade is to encourage the full and best use of farms, mines,                     forests and factories, and because of the factors we have                     mentioned as being peculiar to Canada there is no country                     on earth which needs more the fullest co-operation of                     all its producers and workers. There is no country on earth                     more willing to take action to promote trade. But more is                     needed than merely markets for raw materials. If reliance                     is placed wholly upon low-profit unprocessed goods Canada&#8217;s                     purchasing power will be affected. Export markets must be                     found for manufactured products. Since the beginning of this                     century Canada has made great industrial strides, and her                     post-war economy depends largely upon maintaining the                     advantage and extending it. In the Canada Year Book for 1944                     figures are given which show the degree of manufacture entering                     into Canadian domestic exports for 1942; and these offer an                     interesting comparison with the 1900 figures:<\/p>\n<table width=\"415\" border=\"1\" cellpadding=\"2\" cellspacing=\"0\" class=\"smltabletxt\">\n<tr>\n<td valign=\"top\"><\/td>\n<td colspan=\"2\" align=\"center\" valign=\"top\">per cent of total exports<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<tr>\n<td valign=\"top\"><\/td>\n<td valign=\"top\" align=\"center\">1942<\/td>\n<td valign=\"top\" align=\"center\">1900<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<tr>\n<td valign=\"top\">Raw materials<\/td>\n<td valign=\"top\" align=\"center\">12.7<\/td>\n<td valign=\"top\" align=\"center\">41.5<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<tr>\n<td valign=\"top\">Partly manufactured<\/td>\n<td valign=\"top\" align=\"center\">20.6<\/td>\n<td valign=\"top\" align=\"center\">17.7<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<tr>\n<td valign=\"top\">Fully manufactured<\/td>\n<td valign=\"top\" align=\"center\">66.7<\/td>\n<td valign=\"top\" align=\"center\">40.8<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<\/table>\n<p>The broader field of international barter includes services                     and securities, but the largest factor in Canada&#8217;s international                     transactions is commodity export. Canada is a continent of                     rich natural resources, worth only what we can sell them for.                     If there is no market, then surpluses cease to be resources,                     and we shall have to revise our standard of living drastically.                     There have been tremendous strides toward efficiency in manufacturing.                     Given the demand, Canadian firms have demonstrated their capacity,                     their adaptability, and their initiative. A decade of technological                     development has been crowded into every few months. War&#8217;s                     end will find Canada with greater manufacturing facilities,                     more new materials and more skilled workers than ever before                     in the country&#8217;s history.<\/p>\n<h3>Great Problems<\/h3>\n<p>Canada, thirty-first among the nations in respect to                     population, is today the third trading nation in the world,                     with exports running at a level considerably in excess of                     $3 billion annually. In the 20 years from 1&#8243;919 to 1939 there                     was not one when the amount of exports even closely approached                     one-half of the present figure. This is a splendid record,                     but it is not placed here for purposes of encouraging complacency.                     On the contrary, it raises problems of first-rate magnitude.                     Canada has built her living standard upon the foundation of                     export trade, but 80 per cent of the export business we are                     now doing belongs in the category of temporary, abnormal,                     wartime trade, with about 20 per cent in the class of normal                     and permanent trade. This warning was given recently by the                     Minister of Trade and Commerce. It is upon the basis of the                     $600 million a year normal trade that Canada will have to                     rebuild the whole structure of her export trade. Fortunately,                     trade in civilian commodities with most former markets, except                     those occupied by the enemy, has been reasonably well maintained.                     While the great bulk of exports goes to countries engaged                     in the war, there are about 50 countries to which we are exporting                     goods in steady quantities. In 1938, according to the vice-chairman                     of the Canadian Manufacturers&#8217; Association Commercial Intelligence                     Committee, Canada &#8220;had far too many eggs in two baskets, Britain                     and America, who bought our materials and manufactured goods                     with little or no sales effort on our part. In a highly competitive                     world we will have to do much better than that&#8230;&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Among the external influences which will affect Canadian                     foreign trade is the industrialization of many countries on                     a scale approaching Canada&#8217;s own. India, Australia, China                     and some South American republics have been literally forced                     into industrial activity. It is the opinion of traders, however,                     that this need cause no general decrease in our world trade,                     but only a change in its character. Industrialization of undeveloped                     countries does not spell ruin for us. Even before the war                     the greatest weight of world trade was between industrial                     countries, the chief factor in increased trade being a rising                     standard of living.<\/p>\n<p>Those who have been engaged in export trade, as well as                     newcomers to the trade field, need to give attention to their                     fences. Some of them furnish the trade commissioners with                     too meagre information, thus handicapping them in efforts                     to merchandise Canadian products. Quotations are sometimes                     thoughtlessly prepared. It is not enough to answer enquiries;                     business must be sought. If two firms quote on the same goods                     at substantially the same price and one quotes in dollars                     per hundred pounds F.O.B. factory, while the other quotes                     in pounds sterling per 112 pound &#8220;hundredweight&#8221; c.i.f. United                     Kingdom Port, the latter is likely to get the British order.                     The United Kingdom is, ordinarily, a buyer&#8217;s market, and care                     must be taken there, as elsewhere, to respect the habits and                     feelings of the prospective customer.<\/p>\n<h3>Prospective Markets<\/h3>\n<p>As we remarked earlier, trade with the United Kingdom and                     the United States was of supreme importance to Canada before                     the war. The total trade between the United States and Canada                     was greater than the total trade between any other two countries                     on the face of the earth. In 1943 Canada sent 34 per cent                     of her exports to the United Kingdom and 39 per cent to the                     United States. Canada&#8217;s trade with both countries is of far                     greater importance to her than their trade with Canada is                     to them. Canadian exports to these countries were, according                     to the Rowell-Sirois Commission, between $30 and $40                     per capita, as compared with their exports to Canada of between                     $2.50 and $4 per capita. In a depression, both the United                     Kingdom and the United States can look to some important increases                     in the real value of their exports and of their other income                     from abroad to soften the blow, but Canada finds the impact                     of depression intensified by the fall in the real purchasing                     power of the bulk of her exports.<\/p>\n<p>America south of the United States is a relatively new field                     for Canadian trade. Our exports to ten Latin American countries                     climbed from $19 million in 1939 to $25 million in 1943. Canada                     has an advantage over the United States in dealing with Central                     and South American countries, in that she is less self-sufficient                     and can therefore import a more diversified list of products.<\/p>\n<p>India, as was pointed out in this Letter last December,                     holds out prospect of business opportunity which should gladden                     the hearts of ambitious producers and exporters. Our two economies                     are complementary. India offers many commodities not produced                     in Canada, while we can ship to India a long list of consumer                     goods to meet the demands of its 400 million inhabitants.<\/p>\n<p>How are such opportunities to be developed? Many agencies,                     including the Federal and Provincial Governments, manufacturers&#8217;                     and producers&#8217; associations, co-operatives, financial                     institutions, and a host of others, are at work gathering                     information. No surface analysis will suffice the exporter                     who takes a long view of his efforts; there must be keen analytical                     studies, intelligent evaluation, and favourable public relations.                     Someone must study the customs, manners, habits, buying power                     and living conditions of the prospective customer country.                     Someone needs to know about distribution and methods of selling.                     There needs to be education about Canada, as well as about                     the products of Canada.<\/p>\n<h3>Helpful Markets<\/h3>\n<p>Foreign traders have for 50 years looked to the Department                     of Trade and Commerce as their government source for current                     and detailed information relating to international trade.                     The department supplies trade statistics, market surveys,                     names of selling outlets and sources of raw materials, information                     on credit, collection and exchange, tariffs, laws, prevailing                     trade practices, competition, buying power, selling methods,                     and everything else that enters into the building up and maintaining                     of foreign trade connections. The department&#8217;s Commercial                     Intelligence Service, expanded this year, has headquarters                     at Ottawa and a corps of trade commissioners stationed abroad.                     These commissioners make periodic reports on conditions in                     their fields, telling of trade and financial developments,                     variations in markets, and opportunities for Canadian products,                     and they secure and forward to Ottawa specific enquiries for                     Canadian goods. Today&#8217;s business ambassador is no tea-party                     lion. About his own country he needs to know the most up-to-date                     facts concerning business development, results of research,                     and qualities and quantities of natural and manufactured products.                     About the country to which he is accredited he needs to know                     not only the requirements but the desires and peculiarities                     of demand. He must appraise the commercial trend, to advise                     producers of speculative or perishable goods when and whether                     to forward large consignments. He requires the ability and                     the staff to tell producers authoritatively and exactly what                     is wanted in the market he represents. Manufacturers regard                     the trade commissioner service as an essential complement                     to their own export departments. Many of the commissioners                     are packing their bags for a return to formerly occupied countries,                     where they will be of great service in the reconstruction                     period, not only to Canadian exporters but to the government,                     re-establishment agencies, and the newly released countries.                     Much information gathered by all branches of the department                     is published in the weekly Commercial Intelligence Journal.<\/p>\n<p>Outside of government organizations, there are associations                     which represent commercial interests directly. The Canadian                     Manufacturers&#8217; Association has had as one of its objectives                     since 1871 the promotion of Canadian industries and the furtherance                     of the interests of manufacturers and exporters. The Chamber                     of Commerce has furnished a common meeting-ground for                     those interested in the well-being of commerce with other                     countries. The recently organized Exporters&#8217; Association has                     done useful work in several fields, particularly in bringing                     exporters together to take steps in their own behalf, instead                     of relying altogether on government agencies. The Canadian                     chartered banks have connections in all countries in the world,                     with facilities to take care of the mechanics of financing                     external trade.<\/p>\n<p>At a time when Canada is faced with a greater number of                     imponderables than ever in her history, it is well to ask                     whether everything possible is being done to prepare for the                     most important day the modern world will experience, V Day.                     Is Canadian industry fully prepared for the possibilities                     that will open up &#8211; prepared in vision, in expert knowledge,                     in organization? Though Canadian goods are second to none                     in quality, manufacturers have been too slow at pushing them                     in the world&#8217;s markets, in the judgment of a Venezuelan business                     man who visited Montreal this summer. They fail to plan their                     targets, but settle on what the R.C.A.F. calls &#8220;targets of                     opportunity&#8221;. That is not the kind of offensive which wins                     battles. Haphazard and sporadic efforts are useless. Planning                     must be on a permanent, long-range basis. And it must                     see obligations as well as opportunities. Once foreign trade                     has been solicited, the exporter should be prepared to make                     prompt deliveries of thoroughly dependable goods offering                     good value. Development of foreign trade requires energy,                     imagination and courage. These are virtues of private enterprise,                     and in the years which follow the peace private enterprise                     must display all the vision, co-operation and initiative                     of which it is capable. There can be no substitute for the                     creative spirit of personal initiative acting with due regard                     to the public good and free from cumbersome restrictions.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"author":79,"featured_media":0,"template":"","categories":[1],"rbc_letter_theme":[],"rbc_letter_year":[24],"class_list":["post-4117","rbc_letter","type-rbc_letter","status-publish","hentry","category-uncategorized","rbc_letter_year-24"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v27.4 (Yoast SEO v27.4) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-premium-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>September 1944 - Vol. 25, No. 9 - International Trade - RBC<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/september-1944-vol-25-no-9\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"September 1944 - Vol. 25, No. 9 - International Trade - RBC\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"At a time when the nations are gladly making plans for peace, it is of the greatest importance to think seriously of international trade. 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War production has been a wonderful achievement in all the United Nations. 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