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A Canadian trading company : an analysis of the potential benefits of transferring a Japanese-style export promotion and marketing concept to the Canadian economic environmentStringer, Anne Marie January 1981 (has links)
This paper is an attempt to look at the possibilities behind the federal government of Canada's proposal to create a new agency in the area of industrial export trade. According to the premises set down by the Government in its April 1980, Throne Speech, the initiative is primarily aimed at supporting small and medium-sized businesses in their efforts to penetrate foreign markets. It is natural for a government
concerned with increasing competition abroad and rising unemployment
in the industrial sector at home to start worrying about where industrial employment and overseas industrial markets are going to come from in the future. The wording of the Throne Speech and the policy studies undertaken prior to April 1980, regarding a potential national trading company seem to indicate that the Government had had the Japanese example of the trading house structure very much in mind, when closer study of such an enterprise was proposed, given Japan's thriving industrial
sector and its successful export achievements.
In the aftermath of the Throne Speech a Special Committee of the House of Commons was created in June of 1980 to further study the question of a future "National Trading Corporation." The Committee came down with its fourth and final report, Canada's Trading Challenge, in June of 1981, in which its basic recommendation after a year of deliberations was that "the federal government sponsor the development of a major Canadian trading
corporation." This final conclusion by the Committee stands in
direct contrast to evidence presented by witnesses before the Committee, and it seems to be an opinion reached by the Committee majority based on material and opinions obtained in addition to the briefs and the evidence
gathered during the Committee's public hearings. / Arts, Faculty of / Political Science, Department of / Graduate
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The effect of the war on Canadian foreign trade.Friedlander, John Brown. January 1946 (has links)
No description available.
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An investigation into the level of intra-industry trade between Canada and the United States, 1968-80 /Justus, Martha January 1992 (has links)
No description available.
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Des methodes quantitatives appliquées au commerce international et interprovincial du QuebecNappi, Carmine. January 1973 (has links)
No description available.
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An analysis of Canada-Venezuela cargo flow and trade : with special reference to wheat, seed potatoes and newsprint.Smith, Peter G. M. (Peter Geoffrey Mastin). January 1968 (has links)
No description available.
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The New Trade Agreement between the United States and Canada, signed - November 17, 1938.Kirchschlager, Hellmuth L. January 1940 (has links)
No description available.
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Canadian reciprocity under the administration of William Howard TaftWright, Nelson Jones. January 1941 (has links)
LD2668 .T4 1941 W71 / Master of Science
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Globalization and Canadian society : rhetoric or realityUrmetzer, Peter Robert 11 1900 (has links)
Over the past decade, the topic of globalization has infiltrated both public and academic debates.
The aim of this dissertation is to investigate whether the growth in the discussion of globalization
is justified by an equivalent increase in the interaction of economies. The focus of this dissertation
is on economic globalization and specifically how it affects Canada. Evidence of cross-border
'flows' is presented in three parts. One, the trade of goods is traced from Confederation (1867)
to the present, showing that contemporary levels of trade are not unprecedented. Furthermore,
the data reveal that the bulk of the increase in Canada's trade since the Second World War has
been with the United States. There are also strong indications that as the economy is becoming
more service oriented, it will also become less trade dependent. Two, statistics on foreign direct
investment (FDI) reveal that foreign ownership in Canada is at an all-time historical low. Three,
the stock of portfolio investments (stocks and bonds) owned across borders is also not,
historically speaking, at particularly high levels. Overall, when foreign direct and portfolio
investment are combined, the data show that only a small percentage of Canada's wealth is owned
by foreign investors and, likewise, only a small portion of Canada's wealth is located outside of its
borders.
Another claim found in the globalization literature is that the nation state is weakening or
disappearing altogether. However, once subjected to scrutiny, this claim, too, is difficult to
sustain. Government expenditures have increased dramatically since the Second World War and
show few signs of abating. For the fiscal year 1996/97, government expenditures amounted to
approximately half of the Gross Domestic Product (GDP), indicating a general levelling of
expenditures since the mid-1970s. More importantly, the globalization literature has unfailingly
ignored the welfare-state side of government spending, arguably the most significant development
in the political economy of the nation state in the 20th century. To bridge this gap, three sectors
of the welfare state — education, health, and social services — are examined in detail. Lastly, an
alternate explanation for globalization is put forward. Capital, it is argued, has made a concerted
attack on the welfare state, utilizing high interest rates and high unemployment to discipline
labour. Although having suffered a few scratches and dents as a consequence, the welfare-state
has resolutely endured.
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Impact of Canadian stabilization programs on pork exports to the United StatesSavard, Marielle January 1989 (has links)
No description available.
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Canadian public opinion and free tradeMayer, Michael Allan January 1988 (has links)
This thesis begins with a review of the elite debate over free trade with the United States. It then uses a three-fold theoretical framework to formulate predictions of how mass opinion should line up. It then analyzes public opinion data on free trade through the use of crosstabulations.
Using a theory of changing exposure to international trade upon domestic political cleavages formulated by Ronald Rogowski, it predicts that labour will oppose free trade because it is a scarce factor of production, and capital will support it because it is an abundant factor of production.
It next uses work by, among others, W.A. Mackintosh to predict that respondents in the "industrial heartland" regions of Canada--Quebec and Ontario--will oppose free trade because it threatens to remove the protective tariff that rewards import replacement industries concentrated in
those two regions. In contrast, residents of the "resource extracting and processing hinterland" regions—British
Columbia, the Prairies and the Atlantic—will, on balance,
support free trade because it promises to improve their
export performance.
The thesis then predicts that women and lower income
Canadians will oppose free trade. Women because many of the
services that they consume—health and day care, for
example—will become more difficult to obtain under a free trade regime. Women will also oppose free trade because it may be threaten the service sector jobs that many women now hold. Lower income Canadians should oppose free trade because of the possible deleterious effects greater reliance on the market to allocate social services could have on poorer Canadians.
Finally, the thesis predicts that better-educated Canadians will oppose free trade because it threatens one of the "core-values" of Canadian society: independence from the United States.
Data analysis reveals, however, that opinion is remarkably balanced. For example, the difference between union and non-union respondents is only five percent. Regionally, the largest differences in support for free trade is between British Columbia and Ontario, but it amounts to little more than a twenty percent difference. Women are slightly more likely to oppose free trade than men; income appears to play little role in the formation of opinion on free trade. Last, differences in opinion between articulate and less well educated Canadians also appears to be insignificant. / Arts, Faculty of / Political Science, Department of / Graduate
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