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Eyeballing Canada’s post-manufacturing economy

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Eyeballing Canada's post-manufacturing economy
In the ongoing debate as to when the recession will end and the recovery begin, one corporate executive cites agriculture as being literally in the middle of the long road back, as he details in this column from the Globe and Mail.

July 7, 2009  By Gwyn Morgan | Globe and Mail



July 6, 2009 – Canadians marked our national birthday last week firm in the conviction that there's no better place to live.

Yet, beneath the surface of this year's Canada Day celebrations was the worry about how long what has been labelled the great recession will last. Some say it will end soon, others say it won't be over for a long time. But what will "over" actually look like?

The short answer is that our economy will never return to the pre-recession status quo.

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Prior to the financial crisis, the process of relocating global manufacturing to Asian nations was already well advanced, but new job creation in other sectors kept unemployment rates surprisingly low. Now, job losses throughout the economy, combined with shuttered factories, have sharply increased unemployment. Economic recovery will bring renewed job growth, but the transformation of Western nations into post-manufacturing economies is an unstoppable force.

The crucial question is: What will Canada's post-manufacturing economy look like? Some of the basic categories that will determine our post-manufacturing future include services, transportation, natural resources, agriculture, construction, global value-chain management and specialty manufacturing.

The highest employment category is services, which includes areas such as food marketing and distribution, legal and accounting, banking and wealth management. Technology and technical services such as engineering design will be in high demand here in Canada and also internationally, where Canadians enjoy a world-class reputation. Tourism and hospitality will continue to suffer from further weakening of the U.S. dollar and an overhang of American household debt. Our aging demographic will place even more pressure on acute and long-term health services which cannot be met within our dysfunctional and inefficient government health-care monopoly model. Canada will have no choice but to join all other Western countries in contracting out for private provision of publicly funded services, and allowing user-pay options.

Ground and air transportation will suffer from the decline of manufacturing, reduced tourism and the likelihood of higher fuel prices.

Asian demand will continue to strengthen prices for oil and base metals. Natural gas may have a slower recovery from currently depressed prices, but the longer-term picture is bright due to its environmental superiority over coal-fired power combined with expansion of its use as a motor fuel. Saskatchewan's huge uranium and potash deposits will thrive in an energy- and food-challenged world. The outlook for forest products remains bleak, given the housing overstock and inefficiency of older paper mills.

Agriculture has transformed from the small, mixed-product family farm of my youth into large-scale, single-product food crop farms or cattle ranches that ship calves to enormous feedlots owned by major agri-business firms. Poultry and hog production have also become huge, concentrated operations. The biggest challenge for this sector is the increasing public realization that pollution from agri-business causes the biggest negative environmental impact of any industry on watershed health and safety, as well as air quality.

Beyond agriculture -housing and technology

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