Edmonton Journal

‘Openness’ leads to progress: Poloz

- ANDY BLATCHFORD

OTTAWA Bank of Canada governor Stephen Poloz used a history lesson Tuesday to make a case for a policy mix frequently promoted by the federal government — an openness to more foreign investment, immigratio­n and free trade.

In a prepared speech, Poloz said Canada has seen these ingredient­s produce positive economic results in its past, including the freermarke­t colonial times, the early 1900s and the post-Second World War era. On the other hand, he said periods that saw Canada turn inwards, such as the tariff-heavy years that followed Confederat­ion and the Great Depression, have rarely led to success.

“I find the correlatio­n between economic progress and openness to be striking,” he said at Durham College in his hometown of Oshawa, Ont. “When trade barriers are falling, when people are coming to our shores and when investment is rising, Canadians prosper.”

Poloz recalled a historical ebb and flow of Canadian access to the U.S. market, a lesson he delivered as the current Trump administra­tion considers measures that could restrict trade. In his speech, Poloz praised deals like NAFTA for eliminatin­g tariffs and creating benefits in some sectors, which he said more than offset losses in other areas. He said consumers now have more buying power because of lower prices.

“Protection­ism does not promote growth and its costs are steep,” he said.

Poloz also underlined what he described as another successful pursuit of the past that’s often cited by the Trudeau government — the need to attract foreign cash to help Canada fund major infrastruc­ture projects.

Foreign investment was key behind Canadian projects like the transconti­nental railroad, the St. Lawrence Seaway and the TransCanad­a Highway, he said.

On immigratio­n, Poloz noted that “simple arithmetic” shows its importance. He pointed to a recent Statistics Canada study that predicted Canada would have to rely entirely on immigratio­n in less than 30 years to maintain its population growth.

 ??  ?? Stephen Poloz
Stephen Poloz

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