Celebrating Canada's Year of Asia Pacific
November 21, 1996
Vancouver, British Columbia
I am always delighted to be in Vancouver and in British Columbia.
But it is especially appropriate to be here today, en route to
the APEC Leaders Meeting in Manila, in the Philippines.
Because our membership in APEC is the manifestation of our identity
as a Pacific nation. Part of the Pacific Rim -- the most dynamic,
fastest-growing market in the world. The region of the next millennium.
And what anchors us in this region -- not just in geography --
but in attitude, in mind set, in vision... is British Columbia.
To just about everybody in BC that is not news. That is a reality
they have understood for a long time. That is why British Columbia
business has been among the most aggressive at seeking new markets
across the Pacific. But as usual with many of the good trends
that start on the West Coast, they sometimes take a while to catch
on back East.
Of course, the fact is that we have been a Pacific nation for
most of our history as a country -- when British Columbia joined
Confederation in 1871. And we didn't even realize it. We were
too preoccupied with the mother countries across our other ocean.
Or our vast neighbour to the south.
When our government came to office we were determined to change
this. We said in the Red Book that we would strengthen Canada's
trading relationships with the nations of the Pacific Rim. And
we set to doing it the day we were sworn in. We appointed the
first-ever member of the ministry dedicated to Pacific issues,
Raymond Chan, the Secretary of State for Asia Pacific. And just
two weeks after taking office, my very first foreign trip as Prime
Minister was to the first APEC Leaders Meeting in Seattle.
And we haven't looked back since. I had the honour to lead two
of the most successful trade missions in Canadian history -- the
two Team Canada Trade Missions to Asia. With an all-star team
of provincial premiers and business people, we proved to the countries
of the Pacific Rim that after years of false starts and half measures,
Canada was serious about the Pacific region -- and we were there
to stay.
The first Team Canada mission to China was two years ago this
month. Last January we took Team Canada on the road again, to
India, Pakistan, Indonesia and Malaysia. And the results have
been billions of dollars in deals for Canadian businesses, thousands
of new jobs for Canadians, and a new profile and prominence for
Canada in Asia.
So, as you can see, developing Canada's Pacific identity has been
a major priority for the government. And for me personally.
And that priority continues.
That is why, our biggest-yet Pacific initiative lies ahead of
us -- 1997 -- Canada's Year of Asia Pacific. It will be a celebration
of Canadian involvement and participation in the region.
It will be an opportunity to take stock of our accomplishments
and demonstrate our strong ties to the Asia-Pacific community.
And a launching pad to catapult that relationship to an even higher
level.
The culmination of Canada's Year of the Pacific will be the 1997
APEC Leaders Meeting -- to be held here in Vancouver next November.
Canada takes over as APEC chair following the Manila meeting.
Our priority will be to help move APEC further along toward the
goal of achieving free and open trade and investment in the region
for developed countries by 2010 and for developing countries by
2020.
Obviously our economic agenda is very important. But Canada's
Year of Asia Pacific encompasses much more than APEC.
Last week, here in Vancouver, my colleagues David Anderson and
Raymond Chan announced this special Year as a showcase for Canadians
to celebrate their important role in the Asia-Pacific community.
They have invited business, cultural and youth groups to launch
projects that would throw a spotlight on the rich diversity of
Canada's relations with our Asia Pacific partners, and help us
build upon our expanding ties.
The ideas for those projects are now coming in, and I can assure
you today that Canada's Year of Asia Pacific will be a remarkable
celebration of commerce, culture and enlightenment. I encourage
all of you to get involved. There is a lot to celebrate.
Just look at Vancouver. I have come to this great city of Vancouver
many times throughout my life, and many times since becoming prime
minister. I am always struck by the buzz of international business
here.
I am impressed by the freighters resting at anchor in English
Bay, waiting their turn to slip under the Lion's Gate Bridge to
load or unload their cargoes. On one of my recent visits, I opened
the extension of Vancouver International Airport. According to
Canadian Airlines, their Asian traffic has contributed to a 75%
increase in passengers here since 1991.
Much of BC's prosperity has been built on trade and investment
with Asia Pacific. Of course BC's big resource companies in mining
and forestry have found major markets in Japan and China and Indonesia.
But I also know from my experience in leading Team Canada missions
to Asia that many small- and medium-sized companies are creating
jobs here at home from contracts signed abroad. And their local
suppliers are also benefitting.
Vancouver benefits from substantial Asia-Pacific investment. You
only have to look at the transformation of False Creek to recognize
the importance of foreign investment. Asian companies have played
important roles in the traditional resource industries here.
Where Vancouver has led, the rest of Canada has followed. Partnership
with Asia Pacific is now a pan-Canadian phenomenon. It extends
across our vast country.
The companies who joined me and the premiers in Team Canada missions,
signing business deals worth billions of dollars, can be found
in every province in Canada.
Raw numbers tell the story of our commercial success. Canadian
exports to Asia Pacific increased by 32 per cent from 1994 to
1995, reaching a total of $27.1 billion. Our exports to Japan
rose 24 per cent and to Southeast Asia -- Singapore, Malaysia,
Thailand and Indonesia -- 47 per cent.
At the same time, the contributions of Asian investment to our
economic growth can be seen across Canada -- from oil sands plants
in Fort MacMurray, Alberta to car factories in Cambridge, Ontario
to steel mills in Sydney, Nova Scotia.
As you can see, Canada's membership in the Asia-Pacific community
is already a full, diverse, dynamic and growing one. In 1997 we
will celebrate that membership and our commitment to maintain
and expand it.
Our Year of Asia Pacific will be a wonderful party. But it will
be much more than that. Since the formation of APEC in 1989, Canada
has dedicated itself to working with our partners for sustained
growth and better access to markets.
Fundamental to this goal is the effort to remove trade barriers
that hinder economic growth and job creation.
We have made remarkable progress in only a few years. Two years
ago in Indonesia, APEC leaders endorsed the principle of free
and open trade for the region. We established deadlines for trade
and investment liberalization. Last year in Japan each of us agreed
to draw up action plans outlining the steps we are taking to achieve
that goal.
This year in the Philippines I will review progress with my fellow
APEC leaders and discuss further actions we can take to improve
access to markets and to support further economic growth.
It is vital that Canada, in our role as APEC chair, maintain the
momentum for trade liberalization. We have a strong track record
in implementation of the North American Free Trade Agreement,
and in the World Trade Organization. The benefits from the removal
of trade barriers are obvious in the impressive growth of our
exports.
The APEC deadline for achieving trade and investment liberalization
is in the next century, but we are not waiting until then. Much
of what we want can be achieved today by improving the conditions
for doing business in the region.
For example, through closer cooperation APEC members can improve
the efficiency of customs operations by introducing full electronic
systems. We can make it easier to do business in the region.
Our ideas are not produced in a vacuum. APEC recognizes the role
the private sector must play in the creation of economic growth.
APEC leaders are beginning a dialogue with the APEC Business Advisory
Council. In 1997 Canada will chair the Council, and I am pleased
to report that two of Canada's members are from Vancouver: Dorothy
Riddle and Terry Hui.
Also in the Philippines, I will address a major APEC international
business conference, where Canadian business representatives will
meet to discuss opportunities with colleagues from all 18 economies
represented in APEC.
Throughout Canada's Year of Asia Pacific, Canada is organizing
a series of business forums that will explore commercial opportunities
in the region. Many of them will be chaired by Canadian ministers,
bringing in their colleagues from throughout the region to foster
new cooperation in such areas as energy, transport, environment
and small- and medium-sized businesses.
I am extremely pleased with the commitment shown by so many Canadians
to enhance our Asia-Pacific partnerships. The success of the Team
Canada missions is a good example. Not just during the trade
missions -- but in the long-term trade relationships they helped
establish.
I have had the opportunity to visit some of the companies, in
different parts of Canada, that participated in Team Canada trips.
I've been very impressed by what I have seen.
In case after case, the companies are not only filling the orders
they signed on the missions; they are now dealing with new orders,
from new customers. And not only from the countries we visited
together, but from other countries as well.
When I witnessed the signing of those business deals during the
Team Canada trips, I knew we had done the right thing. We were
making powerful business connections and laying the groundwork
for future growth.
So it was a delight for me this summer to see the new orders coming
in and the new jobs being created. It is clear that an aggressive
Team Canada approach, with the cooperation of federal, provincial
and municipal governments and the private sector, has succeeded
in producing good jobs with good incomes in the growing economic
sectors of today and tomorrow for Canadians.
So I am not going to argue with success. In six weeks time, the
premiers and I -- along with business people from across the country
-- will leave for a new Team Canada mission to South Korea, Thailand
and the Philippines.
The opportunities for Canadians in these markets are first-rate.
As you know, Canadian firms are world leaders in goods and services
that build economic infrastructure -- in other words, the goods
and services that make economies work.
Information technology, transportation, financial services, education
and construction are some of the sectors we will be highlighting.
We will also be promoting our resource products in forestry, mining,
energy and agri-food.
With the first-rate goods and services that Canadian companies
have to offer, it is no wonder that I am such an optimist.
As I depart for Manila today, I am excited by the great energy
which Canadians have devoted to building partnerships in the Asia
Pacific community. In the months to come, in Canada's Year of
Asia Pacific and beyond, our government will be doing its best
to maintain an atmosphere to help those partnerships can grow.
Canada's Year of Asia Pacific will not be the beginning of our
efforts in this region. And it will not be the end. But it will
be an important milestone. A recognition of a fundamental fact
of Canadian existence. Canada is part of the Asia Pacific community.
And we will celebrate that from coast -- to coast -- to coast.
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