Pubdate: Wed, 10 Aug 2005 Source: Victoria Times-Colonist (CN BC) Copyright: 2005 Times Colonist Contact: http://www.canada.com/victoria/timescolonist/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/481 Author: Les Leyne Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) ADD DOPE TO THE LIST OF OUR KEY ECONOMIC FACTORS The deep thinkers at the B.C. Business Council have come up with 10 key trends that will shape the province through 2010. Some of them are easy picks, such as external world forces that everyone is grappling with, like China. Some of them are internal, made-in-B.C. issues, such as labour market changes. Although they missed a few, the trends are worth a run-through, as factors to keep in mind when watching what becomes of B.C. over the next few years. - - Native treaties have stalled out, but native economic ventures are taking shape that could be a sign of good things to come. Corporate-aboriginal business ventures are becoming more common and they are seen as a good route out of poverty-stricken reserves. - - The graph of B.C. merchandise exports to five leading countries shows four stable lines and one going almost straight up. That's China. B.C.'s international trade realigned back to the U.S. in the 1990s, but now all the growth is with China; 400 per cent since 1993. That country's ferocious appetite and growth (read China Inc.) is a dominant factor in the world right now, and B.C. is one of the closer bystanders to that phenomenon. - - Labour shortages, immigration and population growth. It's going to be a good time to have a skilled trade, demographically speaking. And if serious labour shortages develop, increased immigration is the only way to solve them, as the birth rate has stayed low for years. Interprovincial migration is also expected to play a role. B.C. netted 7,000 more people from other provinces last year and that net inflow is expected to double in the years ahead. - - Energy is going to take a higher profile. The oil and gas boom will continue, pouring billions into the treasury. Natural gas royalties and associated levies are now the biggest source of direct resource revenue. On the power-supply side, the generating shortfall is now a fact of life. B.C. is a net importer of electricity, with 12 per cent of the power coming from outside the borders. Major new sources of energy are required to meet future domestic demand, as little new generating capacity has been added for decades. It can come from another big dam, small-scale hydro, gas or wind, but it has to come from somewhere, and soon. - - Productivity increases. B.C. has lagged for more than a decade behind other provinces in productivity growth, says the business council. But with investment up and the forest industry restructured, productivity is on the upswing. A multi-year construction boom is also counted on by the business council to be a driver for the next several years, and another high-tech boom could be in the offing. B.C.'s technology sector has been in recovery since the dot-com collapse of 2000, and the different clusters that comprise that industry are posting good growth. - - The last key trend they're watching for is the concept of B.C. and Alberta co-operation to coalesce into something that would give the West some real clout in Canada. Both provinces are growing, they produce 96 per cent of Canada's natural gas, and both have committed to co-operation agreements in the past few years. It started with things like weigh scales, but it could turn into something more important in the next few years. There are a few issues not on their list, but still worth watching. Dope, for instance. The Marc Emery extradition case could be the flashpoint that finally brings fundamental differences between B.C. and the U.S. to a head. The province's relaxed attitudes about marijuana -- a multi-billion-dollar contributor to the underground economy -- is a remarkable contrast to the U.S. war on drugs. Years of simmering resentment south of the border seem to be coming to a head now over Emery's seed-export business. Whatever happens to the self-promoting Marijuana party head, the difference in official postures has big potential, mostly for trouble. Passports are also a factor. A U.S. requirement for everyone entering the country from Canada to eventually have passports could stop the tourism industry in its tracks. A majority of Americans don't carry passports, but they would be required to get one if they wanted to visit Canada and return. That takes about $100 and a couple of weeks waiting for forms to be processed, which is enough to kill more than a few vacation plans. And finally, watch to see if the political culture really is changing in B.C. It was facetiously suggested here last week that "the wacky world of B.C. politics" is dead. A new tone in the capital of boring but responsible debate could usher in all manner of changes in the years ahead. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth