Close X
Thursday, November 14, 2024
ADVT 
National

Surviving exporters of financial crisis must grow operations, Poloz says

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 03 Nov, 2014 10:24 AM

    OTTAWA — Bank of Canada governor Stephen Poloz says exports lost due to the financial crisis will not recover, though he's optimistic replacements will eventually step in to fill the void.

    For it to happen, however, Poloz says companies that survived the crisis must expand operations and new exporting firms must be created.

    In a prepared speech to be delivered Monday, Poloz says recent Bank of Canada research shows the value of Canadian exports from roughly 500 underperforming, non-energy categories has fallen by more than 75 per cent since 2000.

    The central banker says those exports would have added $30 billion worth of exports last year had they instead grown along with foreign demand over that period.

    He says the downturn has inflicted long-lasting, negative effects on the labour market — giving Canada a job-creation rate well below what should be expected from a healing economy.

    Poloz says total hours worked have barely budged and more than 900,000 part-time workers in Canada would prefer full-time positions.

    He also says there are around 200,000 young people who are out of work, underemployed or back in school with hope of improving their employment prospects.

    Poloz is confident the damage to Canada's job-market can be reversed over time, as the expected demand for exports grows and uncertainty about the future fades.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. Police Officer Charged With Second-degree Murder In Fatal Standoff

    B.C. Police Officer Charged With Second-degree Murder In Fatal Standoff
    VICTORIA - A Vancouver-area police officer has been charged with second-degree murder in connection with a standoff outside a casino two years ago.

    B.C. Police Officer Charged With Second-degree Murder In Fatal Standoff

    B.C.'s LNG green law expected, followed by tax legislation

    B.C.'s LNG green law expected, followed by tax legislation
    VICTORIA - Environment Minister Mary Polak is set to introduce environmental rules governing the development of liquefied natural gas in British Columbia.

    B.C.'s LNG green law expected, followed by tax legislation

    Sentencing Postponed For Edmonton Mother Who Starved And Abused Abused Twin Daughters

    Sentencing Postponed For Edmonton Mother Who Starved And Abused Abused Twin Daughters
    EDMONTON - A sentencing hearing has been postponed for an Edmonton mother who starved and abused her twin daughters before one of them died in hospital.

    Sentencing Postponed For Edmonton Mother Who Starved And Abused Abused Twin Daughters

    Canada Earns AAA Rating From Moody's Despite Warnings On House Prices and Household Debt

    Canada Earns AAA Rating From Moody's Despite Warnings On House Prices and Household Debt
    TORONTO - Moody's Investor Service has raised concern about Canadian household debt and rising house prices, but maintained the country's triple-A rating and stable outlook.

    Canada Earns AAA Rating From Moody's Despite Warnings On House Prices and Household Debt

    Canada Wins Round In Trade Battle With U.S. Over Meat Labelling

    Canada Wins Round In Trade Battle With U.S. Over Meat Labelling
    Canada has won a battle in an ongoing trade dispute with the United States over meat-labelling laws that have hurt the beef and pork industries.

    Canada Wins Round In Trade Battle With U.S. Over Meat Labelling

    Canada Urged To Cancel Ebola Vaccine Licence, Transfer Rights To Bigger Company

    Canada Urged To Cancel Ebola Vaccine Licence, Transfer Rights To Bigger Company
    TORONTO - A prominent law professor is urging the federal government to terminate an American company's licence for a Canadian-made Ebola vaccine.

    Canada Urged To Cancel Ebola Vaccine Licence, Transfer Rights To Bigger Company