- Branch plant economy
Branch plant economy is a term used to describe the phenomenon of
United States companies building factories (branch plants) inCanada , primarily to sell products in the Canadian market. In the period between theAmerican Civil War (early 1860s) andWorld War I , U.S. companies began to look to Canada as a new market. Canadiantariff s on imported products led U.S. companies to build factories in Canada, in effect bypassing the tariffs.Some economists are concerned that this phenomenon means that Canada's manufacturing base may be too reliant on outside expertise and resources, and that it may lead to proportionately less
research and development spending in Canada. Additionally, the degree to which Canadian manufacturing in particular is directed from outside of the country has raised concerns that it is more difficult to direct economic priorities in the interests of Canadians.An upsurge of
Canadian nationalism in the 1960s and early 1970s led the Liberal governments ofLester Pearson andPierre Trudeau to implement policies aimed at regulating foreign investment. The views ofWalter L. Gordon were especially influential in the1960 s. Further left,the Waffle emerged in theNew Democratic Party on a program of Canadian economic nationalism and independence. These developments led to measures such as the creation ofPetro-Canada , a government-owned oil and gas company, implemented by the Trudeau government in the mid-1970s to increase Canadian control over the oil industry. Thecrown corporation was created as one of the demands of the NDP in exchange for their support of Trudeau's minority government. Trudeau also established theForeign Investment Review Agency to regulate foreign investment in the economy and limit the takeover of Canadian-owned companies by foreignmultinational corporation s.The election of
Brian Mulroney 's Progressive Conservative government in the 1984 election brought this period of economic nationalism to an end. Mulroney's government dismantled FIRA and moved to privatize Petro-Canada. The Mulroney government's negotiation and implementation of theCanada-US Free Trade Agreement resulted in increased economic integration between the US and Canada, and was opposed by economic nationalists in the 1988 election.The Canada-US FTA, the
North American Free Trade Agreement and theWorld Trade Organization may bring branch plants to an end as the elimination of many tariffs and trade controls makes it much easier for a foreign supplier to sell in the Canadian market without having a branch plant in the country. Numerous plants, particularly in the textile and manufacturing sector, have shut down and moved toMexico or other countries with lower wages and costs of production.- American industrialization has already used up all there resources and Canada has there lumber for paper and pulp plus they have mining which the U.S. has dominated
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.