Toronto Star

Global sales pitch

Trudeau: Canada still a great place to invest,

- TONDA MACCHARLES OTTAWA BUREAU

OTTAWA— Prime Minister Justin Trudeau talked up Canada’s economic advantages to global investors on a day when the central bank sharply lowered expectatio­ns for how quickly the economy will grow.

Their messages, though different, were not inconsiste­nt.

Speaking to the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerlan­d, Trudeau touted a diverse, educated and innovative workforce, taking a sharply different tack than that of the Conservati­ve government of Stephen Harper, which branded Canada as an energy superpower.

“My predecesso­r wanted you to know Canada for its resources,” said Trudeau. “Well, I want you to know Canadians for our resourcefu­lness.”

He pitched Waterloo as a place of innovation, Whistler, B.C., as a place to ski, and Ottawa as the home to a new government that embraces “diversity” and is willing to invest big in infrastruc­ture “that supports change,” policies that encourage science, innovation and research, and recognizes “dynamic innovation happens in the private sector.”

Natural resources “will always be the basis of the Canadian economy.

“But Canadians also know fully well that growth and prosperity is not just a matter of what lies under our feet but what lies between our ears,” Trudeau said in French.

He acknowledg­ed low oil prices pose “a challenge” to implementi­ng his agenda.

Yet he hinted the oilpatch will face more change, tying “clean” environmen­tal policies to growth. Canada had “an awful lot of trouble getting our pipelines built, getting our resources to market, because a lot of Canadians and even our trading partners and friends have decided that Canada isn’t doing its share and isn’t responsibl­e around the environmen­t,” he said.

Meanwhile, Bank of Canada governor Stephen Poloz said low oil and commodity prices have led to a “significan­t setback” for the Canadian economy and the bank’s expectatio­ns for it, but he urged patience.

The bank held the key overnight lending rate at 0.5 per cent. It said the oil price shock had hit oil-producing provinces hard and was rippling through the broader economy, but a lower dollar was helping the nonenergy sectors and, overall, the economy is slowly adjusting, though it could take three years or more.

The central bank now projects the economy will grow by 1.4 per cent in 2016, a slower pace than the 2-percent growth it projected last fall. The bank is betting on further growth of 2.4 per cent by the end of 2017.

Reuters, citing an unnamed source, reported the federal budget could be delayed to April: a late drop date for any government.

Trudeau gave few hints about how soon he will move. His speech was a relentless­ly optimistic and brazen investment pitch in the face of sombre economic indicators. He said Canada embraces the global push toward a low-carbon economy, saying it “will produce new companies, new growth and new prosperity.”

“If you are looking for a country that has the diversity, the resilience, the positivity and mostly the confidence that will not just manage this change but take advantage of it, there has never been a better time to look to Canada,” Trudeau told the audience of business and financial leaders gathered for the annual schmooze-fest in the Swiss Alps.

Jayson Myers, the head of Canadian Manufactur­ers and Exporters, said while non-energy exports are up 25 per cent in the past two years, it would be a “mistake” for Trudeau to discount the resource sector.

“I think a lot of those exports and the technologi­es themselves are based on what happens in the resource sector,” Myers said.

 ?? ANDREW VAUGHAN/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Prime Minister Justin Trudeau talks with Facebook COO Sheryl Sandberg during a meeting in Davos, Switzerlan­d on Wednesday.
ANDREW VAUGHAN/THE CANADIAN PRESS Prime Minister Justin Trudeau talks with Facebook COO Sheryl Sandberg during a meeting in Davos, Switzerlan­d on Wednesday.

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