{"id":4119,"date":"1946-09-01T01:00:00","date_gmt":"1946-09-01T01:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/september-1946-vol-27-no-9-canada-and-the-united-states\/"},"modified":"2022-11-28T15:01:56","modified_gmt":"2022-11-28T15:01:56","slug":"september-1946-vol-27-no-9-canada-and-the-united-states","status":"publish","type":"rbc_letter","link":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/september-1946-vol-27-no-9-canada-and-the-united-states\/","title":{"rendered":"September 1946 &#8211; Vol. 27, No. 9 &#8211; Canada and the United States"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"layout-column-main\">\n<p class=\"boldtext\">Canada and the United States, having completed                     more than a century of friendship with growing mutual respect                     and increasing co-operation, have just given the world                     a unique example of wartime co-ordination, and may profit                     themselves by the experience if they carry the lessons forward                     into peace. They are closer together today, economically and                     spiritually, than any other two important nations in the world,                     and their relations cannot be viewed by any other nation with                     Olympian detachment.<\/p>\n<p> These two countries are active participants in world affairs,                     custodians of 13 per cent of the world&#8217;s area and home of                     7 per cent of the world&#8217;s population. They have just marched                     together to a victory over philosophies which threatened their                     democratic principles, but this victory only removed certain                     specific dangers. Peace is more than the absence of fighting:                     it is a manner of living together. While Americans and Canadians                     have an idea of where they are aiming to go and what they                     wish to do in the peace, a little clarification of the why                     and how will not hurt, particularly if it is presented with                     a minimum of statistics.<\/p>\n<p>Few figures are necessary, because, despite their liking                     for statistical data, these peoples are more interested in                     the vital aspects of life, in thinking and feeling and doing.                     Here is a comparison, in three lines, of the numerical features:<\/p>\n<table width=\"415\" border=\"1\" cellpadding=\"2\" cellspacing=\"0\" class=\"smltabletxt\">\n<tbody>\n<tr>\n<td valign=\"top\">&nbsp;<\/td>\n<td valign=\"top\" align=\"center\">Canada<\/td>\n<td valign=\"top\" align=\"center\">The United States<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<tr>\n<td valign=\"top\">Area (Square miles)<\/td>\n<td valign=\"top\" align=\"right\">3,695,189<\/td>\n<td valign=\"top\" align=\"right\">3,022,387<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<tr>\n<td valign=\"top\">Population (1944)<\/td>\n<td valign=\"top\" align=\"right\">11,975,000<\/td>\n<td valign=\"top\" align=\"right\">138,100,000<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<tr>\n<td valign=\"top\">National Income<\/td>\n<td valign=\"top\" align=\"right\">$9,685,000,000<\/td>\n<td valign=\"top\" align=\"right\">$160,653,000,000<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<\/tbody>\n<\/table>\n<p>This is a per capita national income of $809 for Canada                     and $1,164 for the United States, but it does not mean that                     Canadians relatively are indigent neighbours. As will be shown,                     the standard of living does not differ greatly.<\/p>\n<p>Some persons go to the length of thinking that Canadians                     are just like Americans except that they did not have sense                     enough to settle farther south where it is not so cold, and                     that their population clusters along the border because Canadians                     wish to get as close to the United States as they can. It                     is true that half the Canadians live within 100 miles, and                     90 per cent within 250 miles, of the border, but it is also                     true that more than half the population of the United States                     lives within 250 miles of the same border. The explanation                     is simple; in the early days there were no highways or railroads,                     and the pioneers were compelled to use the older method of                     travel, water. Settlements grew up beside the best rivers                     and the lakes they connected, and many of these waterways                     extend along what is now the boundary. On the other hand,                     the Laurentian Shield, a wedge of rock extending from Hudson                     Bay down to the Great Lakes, provided a million-square-mile                     barrier to northward expansion of Canadian settlers. The effort                     to bind Canada together on an east-west axis has compelled                     the Dominion to build almost twice the railway mileage per                     capita of the United States.<\/p>\n<p>In another realm, without parallel in the United States,                     Canada has achieved greatly. Canada is a bilingual country,                     with more than 30 per cent of its population of French origin.                     In the Province of Quebec this large minority has maintained                     a cohesion of custom, religion and language which distinguishes                     it nationally and internationally. French Canadians have proved                     to be good farmers, gifted politicians, and eminent in the                     professions. They have kept intact their manner of living,                     and when they marry their English-speaking fellow-countrymen                     it is to absorb them, as witness the thousands with Irish                     or Scottish names in Quebec who can speak only French. The                     French Canadian was cut off almost completely from Europe                     by the fall of New France in the Seven Years&#8217; War and the                     gulf produced by the anti-clerical aspects of the French                     Revolution. He regards himself as truly Canadian.<\/p>\n<p>Because of its dual base and subsequent mixed immigration,                     Canada will never produce a narrow racial nationalism. The                     trend is evident in these figures of population:<\/p>\n<table width=\"415\" border=\"1\" cellpadding=\"2\" cellspacing=\"0\" class=\"smltabletxt\">\n<tbody>\n<tr>\n<td valign=\"top\">Origin:<\/td>\n<td valign=\"top\" align=\"right\">1871<\/td>\n<td valign=\"top\" align=\"right\">1931<\/td>\n<td valign=\"top\" align=\"right\">1941<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<tr>\n<td valign=\"top\">&nbsp;<\/td>\n<td valign=\"top\" align=\"right\">%<\/td>\n<td valign=\"top\" align=\"right\">%<\/td>\n<td valign=\"top\" align=\"right\">%<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<tr>\n<td valign=\"top\">British<\/td>\n<td valign=\"top\" align=\"right\">60.55<\/td>\n<td valign=\"top\" align=\"right\">51.86<\/td>\n<td valign=\"top\" align=\"right\">49.68<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<tr>\n<td valign=\"top\">French<\/td>\n<td valign=\"top\" align=\"right\">31.07<\/td>\n<td valign=\"top\" align=\"right\">28.22<\/td>\n<td valign=\"top\" align=\"right\">30.27<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<tr>\n<td valign=\"top\">Others<\/td>\n<td valign=\"top\" align=\"right\">8.39<\/td>\n<td valign=\"top\" align=\"right\">19.93<\/td>\n<td valign=\"top\" align=\"right\">20.05<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<\/tbody>\n<\/table>\n<p>Canada is most tolerant of religious and cultural convictions                     among its people. As Hugh L. Keenleyside remarked in his book,                     &#8220;Canada and the United States&#8221; -&#8220;The people of Quebec know                     that if Canada were to join the American Union they would                     lose most, if not all, of the special priviliges they enjoy                     at present. No American Congress would look favourably upon                     the linguistic and religious situation that exists in Canada.&#8221;                     The genius of the Dominion must be recognized in its handling                     of this split population, but it may be easier to maintain                     effective democratic government among people of common political                     principles but different languages, than among people of the                     same language but opposing political principles. This is evidenced,                     on the one hand, by the situation in Switzerland and the Union                     of South Africa as well as in Canada, and on the other by                     the American war for independence, the American civil war,                     and the Spanish civil war.<\/p>\n<p>The rest of the world looks with respect, and sometimes                     envy, upon the economic development of the North American                     nations. Life on this continent is not the simple, frugal                     undertaking it is in older countries, devoid of comforts and                     conveniences. Successive stages of growth followed upon each                     other&#8217;s heels with such rapidity that some &#8220;growing pains&#8221;                     resulted, but these have mostly disappeared as adolescence                     passed. Geography and the pressure of events have combined                     to intertwine closely the business structures of Canada and                     the United States, and the unusual degree of similarity in                     the economy of the two countries has meant that business men                     and capitalists have been attracted by opportunities across                     the line, so that there have grown up hundreds of enterprises                     which are known as &#8220;Canadian-American.&#8221; The latest available                     figures report the following foreign investments in Canada:                     United States $4,190 million, Great Britain $2,466 million,                     Others $270 million: Total $6,926 million. In 1937, Canadian                     investments abroad totalled $1,757,900,000, of which more                     than a billion dollars was in the United States. Canadians                     are naturally more conscious of United States investments                     in Canada than are Americans of Canadian investments in the                     United States, though per capita the investments in the United                     States by Canadians are four times as great as those of the                     United States in Canada.<\/p>\n<p>Though often mentioned by public speakers, it is worth repeating                     that these two countries are each other&#8217;s best customers,                     with a total volume of trade exceeding, even in ordinary times,                     the total of trade between any other two countries. Exchange                     of goods was greatly enlarged during the war and it does not                     need an economist to say that a nation is in for difficulties                     when it is driven by emergency of war to buy twice as much                     as usual from another nation. The aptitude of these two countries                     for not only getting around a difficulty but actually turning                     the occasion into one of mutual benefit was shown in the Hyde                     Park declaration of 1941. The underlying reason for that agreement                     was to provide Canada with sufficient United States dollars                     to purchase all the American-made goods she required,                     with the secondary objective of co-ordinating production                     effort so as to avoid needless duplication. By the end of                     1942 notes had been exchanged extending measures of economic                     co-operation into the post-war years. In the words                     of the United States Secretary of State, the aims are: &#8220;&#8230;to                     co-operate in formulating a program of agreed action,                     open to participation by all other countries of like mind,                     directed to the expansion, by appropriate international and                     domestic measures, of production, employment, and the exchange                     and consumption of goods, which are the material foundations                     of the liberty and welfare of all peoples.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Canada&#8217;s experiences have not been easy, economically speaking.                     She is rich in resources, and her people are energetic and                     efficient, but her market of consumers is too small to absorb                     the production of her farms, forests and factories. This problem                     has been enhanced during the war. Canada added a million people                     to industrial employment. She doubled her production of steel,                     and became the fourth greatest producer among the United Nations.                     She is first in the world in production of nickel, asbestos,                     platinum, radium, and newsprint; second among world nations                     in wood pulp, gold, aluminum, mercury and molybdenum; third                     in copper, zinc, lead, silver, arsenic, and fourth in magnesium.<\/p>\n<p>Canada&#8217;s darkest days, probably, were in the middle 1800&#8217;s,                     when Great Britain adopted free trade, because this action                     deprived her of a favoured position in the colonial empire.                     So black was the outlook that talk of annexation to the United                     States sprang up, and a manifesto was published in Montreal                     in 1849 calling for union of the two countries. Five years                     later a reciprocity treaty with the United States relieved                     Canadians of their fears, but in 1866 it was cancelled, largely                     due to Washington&#8217;s resentment toward British sympathies with                     the South during the civil war. By 1897, after many futile                     attempts to regain reciprocal treatment, Canada adopted imperial                     preference, and switched to ideas of trade with the Empire.                     In 1911, a second reciprocity treaty was rejected at a Canadian                     election. The tariff war had its greatest flare-up in                     the Fordney-McCumber and Smoot-Hawley tariffs of                     1922 and 1930, which reduced Canadian access to American markets,                     and Canadians retaliated with large tariff increases of their                     own. In 1932 Canada entered into the &#8220;Ottawa&#8221; agreements designed                     to make the Empire more self-sufficient. By 1935 everyone                     was tired of the tariff battle, in which the economists, many                     of them amateurs, exhausted themselves and their countries                     by defying geography in their effort to prevent the natural                     movement of goods. The reciprocal trade agreement reached                     in that year was revised and renewed in 1938, when Great Britain                     also completed a trade pact with the United States.<\/p>\n<p>It can be said that of recent years the American State Department                     has displayed remarkable knowledge of Canada&#8217;s economic position,                     taking into account her great dependence upon export trade,                     her financial connections with the United States, and her                     relationship with Great Britain and as a member of the British                     Commonwealth of Nations. Just how important the bilateral                     exchange of goods can become is indicated by comparing 1939                     with 1944. In the year war broke out, Canada bought United                     States goods valued at $497 million, and in 1944 her purchases                     from the United States totalled $1,477 million; in 1939 United                     States purchases in Canada amounted to $380 million, and in                     1944 they totalled $1,301 million. Canada is the best customer                     the United States has. She buys more there than she sells                     there. On the other hand, she sells more to the United Kingdom                     than she buys, and uses her balance of sterling funds to purchase                     United States dollars with which to pay the trade balance                     ordinarily due.<\/p>\n<p>American business men do not regard Canada as foreign territory,                     but as a northward extension of the domestic market, and this                     familiarity is of incalculable force in the destinies of the                     two nations. There are hundreds of American-owned factories,                     mines and what-not in Canada. Some were located there                     because the Canadians erected tariff or duty barriers, and                     it was necessary to build plants in the Dominion to avoid                     the charges; others established themselves in Canada to come                     within the Empire preference. Many were built by young Americans                     who saw in the northern country a new frontier challenging                     their enterprise. Canadian banks have United States agencies,                     not for the purpose of soliciting deposits or doing domestic                     business, but to round out their service to cross-the-border                     traders. Insurance companies of each country do business in                     the other.<\/p>\n<p>It may be seen, therefore, that the interchange of capital                     and the growth of bilateral trade have reached proportions                     which make them important to both countries. They have come                     into being in a normal way in the course of business, and                     not by forced culture. Post-war planning shows an inclination                     to continue the trend, and to present to the world an example                     of what neighbouring nations may do if they decide to give                     effect to the ideals of the Atlantic Charter by facilitating                     the exchange and consumption of goods &#8220;which are the material                     foundations of the liberty and welfare of all peoples.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Problems have arisen, of course. The United States can return,                     now that peace has come, to almost normal economic conditions,                     but Canada has been completely changed. She is no longer merely                     a producer of raw materials. Her manufacturing output increased                     from $3,400 million in 1939 to $9,074 million in 1944. What                     is she to do with the products? It is no wonder that the Canadian                     Minister of Finance announced his readiness to discuss with                     the governments of the United States, the United Kingdom,                     or other countries &#8220;reciprocal trade arrangements wider in                     scope and longer in duration than have hitherto been made.&#8221;                     Certainly, with 25 to 35 per cent of the national income accounted                     for by exports and receipts from tourists, Canada will do                     all in her power to reach reciprocal agreements, and the Anglo-American-Canadian                     trade talks hold great significance for her. An article in                     Fortune three years ago said &#8220;If British and Canadian goods                     can be sold in the United States in reasonable quantity, the                     Empire-trade system will never be revived.&#8221; Not only                     that, but if the Anglo-American group of nations are                     resolute in striving for freer trade throughout the world,                     and for normal alignments of materials and production, they                     can remove most of the economic frictions which upset nations.                     A fair interchange, on equal terms, of the products of these                     two North American countries will be greatly to the advantage                     of both, and will give to the world another example of their                     successful application of common-sense methods to international                     relations.<\/p>\n<p>Exchange of goods is facilitated by the splendid systems                     of transportation existing between Canada and the United States                     and the rest of the globe. The St. Lawrence-Great Lakes                     waterway penetrates the continent for 2,350 miles. It takes                     large ocean-going vessels 1,000miles inland to Montreal,                     and smaller ships to the head of the lakes. Other waterways                     in the United States and Canada carry freight south to the                     Gulf of Mexico, and north to Hudson Bay. Through fifty border                     gateways, upwards of 8,000 miles of Canadian-controlled                     railways in the United States are linked with their parent                     systems in Canada, and more than 1,500 miles of United States-controlled                     railway line is operated in Canada. This network links every                     part of both countries, and there is a fine disregard shown                     for political map accidents. The old Grand Trunk line ran                     from Portland, Maine through Canada to Chicago; even at present                     the shortest route from Montreal to Saint John, New Brunswick,                     lies through Maine, and American trains from Detroit to Buffalo                     take a short cut across Ontario. There were only 66 miles                     of railway in Canada in 1850 and 9,000 miles in the United                     States; today the figures, are 43,000 and 257, 000, with capital                     investment of $3,400 million and $18,800 million respectively.                     With one-twelfth the population and volume of traffic,                     Canada has one-sixth the railway mileage and nearly one-sixth                     of the capitalization of the United States. Highways follow                     a similar pattern, although Canada has not nearly the number                     or width of paved roads, and has not, as yet, a highway paved                     all the way from east to west. In air transportation, Canada                     is a major world crossroads, lying athwart the shortest route                     from the United States to either Europe or Asia. It is headquarters                     of the Provisional International Civil Aviation Organization,                     representing the governments of the world in regulation of                     air traffic, and of the International Air Transport Association,                     formed of air transport lines. There were 31 countries represented                     in organization of the latter body, which has for its objective                     the promotion of safe, regular and economical air transport,                     and provision for collaboration among the air transport enterprises                     engaged in international services.<\/p>\n<p>Finance, manufacturing and transportation having been mentioned,                     notice should be taken of agriculture, which engages 23 per                     cent of the total population of the United States, and 27                     per cent of that of Canada. In both countries the agricultural                     industry is made up of family farms; there is no peasant class.                     The temperature range in the United States permits the raising                     of semi-tropical fruits and cotton in the south; corn,                     wheat and other grains in the Mississippi and Columbia river                     valleys, and hardy fruits in the northwest. In Canada, wheat                     of the finest quality is grown in great profusion on the prairies                     in lee of the Rockies; the lower peninsula of Ontario grows                     tobacco, grapes and peaches; the central and eastern provinces                     are given to dairying and mixed farming; in the coastal east                     and west are orchards which are world-famous for their                     product, and fisheries which yield $100 million a year and                     give employment to 50,000 persons in 33,000 boats; while northward                     there are forest resources of apparently inexhaustible quantity.<\/p>\n<p>In spite of Canada&#8217;s preoccupation with manufacturing during                     the war years, when only three men were left on the farms                     for every four who were there in 1939, agricultural production                     doubled and food shipments quadrupled. Total food exports                     during the war amounted to $3,772 million, of which $1,886                     million went to Great Britain and $1,186 million to the United                     States. A measure of the Canadian wheat yield is given by                     figures showing shipments of about a million bushels every                     working day of the three crop years ended in July, sufficient                     for the normal bread requirements of 80,000,000 people in                     addition to the population of Canada. In proportion to population,                     Canada exported more food than any other nation. That was                     in war time. Significant for the future is the need for integration                     of Canadian and United States agriculture, to avoid waste                     effort, waste foodstuffs, and a lowering of the standard of                     living of farmers through needless competition.<\/p>\n<p>There can be no doubt of the impact of economic policy in                     one country upon the economics of the other and upon the living                     standards of its people. There is no more touchy subject at                     the moment than prices, and it would be neither polite nor                     discreet to boast about Canada&#8217;s achievements in price control                     &#8211; yet &#8211; but it should be proper to quote Lawrence Hunt, New                     York lawyer and author: &#8220;Canadians should feel a perfectly                     decent sense of satisfaction when they read in American newspapers                     and hear Americans say &#8216;Canada does this or Canada does that,                     and it works&#8217;.&#8221; It goes without saying that the pressure on                     Canadian price ceilings is greatly increased by upward price                     movement in the United States. On the other side of the slate                     should be written the lesson given by Belgian business men;                     &#8220;dealing with Americans under existing circumstances compares                     unfavourably with the stable conditions in Canada.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>It would never do to close this part of the article without                     laudatory reference to the &#8220;undefended border,&#8221; a subject                     which crops up in practically every goodwill luncheon address.                     Once these two peoples were enemies, and now they are friends.                     They didn&#8217;t make the change by thinking high and obscure thoughts                     about the brotherhood of man, but by learning in the uneasy                     school of experience that it is better business to be friendly,                     and only common sense to be neighbourly. Both nations are                     proud of their record in having one of the most artificial                     boundary lines in the world, a boundary whose shadowy quality                     is attested by many amusing occurrences. In Rock Island, for                     instance, a man may get his hair cut in Canada and his shoes                     shined in the United States at the same time; and nearby a                     car driving along the highway from east to west is in Canada,                     but if it is going from west to east it is in the United States.<\/p>\n<p>This boundary is crossed by more trade, travel, tourists,                     money, radio, trains, cars, newspapers, hockey, and more goodwill                     than any other frontier in the world. Canadians and Americans                     do much the same things, and frequently do them together.                     If anyone wishes to really understand the completeness of                     the disregard shown the border line, he should stand anywhere                     along the Niagara-Buffalo boundary on the first or fourth                     of July. Whether it be the celebration of American Independence                     or of Canadian Confederation, the Stars and Stripes and the                     Union Jacks are all mixed up together, and tourists pour back                     and forth over the international bridges. Malone, N.Y., celebrated                     American-Canadian Goodwill Day on July 1. The people                     of Campobello Island, New Brunswick, where the late President                     F. D. Roosevelt had a summer home, this year dedicated a granite                     cairn to his memory. This fall, Canadian grain combines lumbered                     through United States&#8217; wheat lands giving a practical demonstration                     of the good neighbour policy. There were 375 machines from                     Saskatchewan alone, helping to reap harvests from Texas northward                     through Oklahoma, Kansas and the Dakotas., while later as                     harvest-time moves north, United States machines are                     entering the Canadian prairies on a similar mission.<\/p>\n<p>It took a hundred years to lay out this boundary, about                     3,300 miles in length between Canada and the United States,                     and an additional 1,540 miles between Canada and Alaska. It                     was not done without mistakes, some of them laughable now,                     though headaches at the time. For instance, after the Americans                     had erected a fort at great expense near Rouse&#8217;s Point, a                     survey in 1818 revealed that it was on the Canadian side of                     the line. Did the countries go to war about the fort? The                     solution was simpler than that: they just moved the boundary                     line, so that the fort was on United States soil! Northwest,                     where Ontario, Manitoba and Minnesota come together, a mistake                     in draughtmanship caused a little jog in the line, which encloses                     a section of mainland 10 by 12 miles, and about 100 islands.                     It contains the most northerly post office in the United States,                     and has a population of 100, but it can only be reached through                     Canada or by boat over Lake of the Woods. Out at its far western                     point the boundary line cuts off a little snippet from the                     mainland, so that its American inhabitants must take a voyage                     on sea water, or make a detour through Canada, when they visit                     the United States mainland.<\/p>\n<p>Obviously, neither nation can distrust very much another                     with which it has such relations; which goes into similar                     hysterics over the World Series, uses the same shave lotions                     and lipsticks, cures its colds and poison ivy with the same                     nostrums and creams, twists the language into queer forms                     to express indignation at standing in street cars and trains,                     and, generally, lives the same life in the same way. But this                     does not mean that the people are the same. Actually each                     nation has its own peculiarities and characteristics. It is                     not a two-dimensional matter only, a length of border                     line and the traffic across it. Its greatest profundities                     are in the spiritual rather than in the natural world. The                     question is no longer as to where an invisible line runs;                     it has moved into the realm where men on both sides are wondering                     how the flow of people, rivers, harvesting machines, and trade                     across this line may be added to by the flow of ideas, so                     that the well-being of both peoples may be promoted.<\/p>\n<p>(<em>This article will be concluded next month<\/em>.)<\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"author":79,"featured_media":0,"template":"","categories":[1],"rbc_letter_theme":[],"rbc_letter_year":[26],"class_list":["post-4119","rbc_letter","type-rbc_letter","status-publish","hentry","category-uncategorized","rbc_letter_year-26"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v27.2 (Yoast SEO v27.2) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-premium-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>September 1946 - Vol. 27, No. 9 - Canada and the United States - 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-1946-vol-27-no-9-canada-and-the-united-states\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"September 1946 - Vol. 27, No. 9 - Canada and the United States - RBC\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"Canada and the United States, having completed more than a century of friendship with growing mutual respect and increasing co-operation, have just given the world a unique example of wartime co-ordination, and may profit themselves by the experience if they carry the lessons forward into peace. 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