Gains from Trade for Canada’s North: The Case of a Northern Infrastructure Corridor

In the 19th century, building the Canadian Pacific Railroad was a crucial element for successful and profitable trade between populated and developing portions of southern Canada. In the 21st century, that crucial element could be a northern corridor that eases east-west trade through Canada’s North...

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Main Authors: G. Kent Fellows, Trevor Tombe
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: University of Calgary 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doaj.org/article/619313510207479aa5b6d70bb41ed21b
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spelling ftdoajarticles:oai:doaj.org/article:619313510207479aa5b6d70bb41ed21b 2023-08-27T04:11:13+02:00 Gains from Trade for Canada’s North: The Case of a Northern Infrastructure Corridor G. Kent Fellows Trevor Tombe 2018-03-01T00:00:00Z https://doaj.org/article/619313510207479aa5b6d70bb41ed21b EN eng University of Calgary https://dev.journalhosting.ucalgary.ca/index.php/sppp/article/view/43342 https://doaj.org/toc/2560-8312 https://doaj.org/toc/2560-8320 2560-8312 2560-8320 https://doaj.org/article/619313510207479aa5b6d70bb41ed21b The School of Public Policy Publications, Vol 11 (2018) Political institutions and public administration (General) JF20-2112 article 2018 ftdoajarticles 2023-08-06T00:34:47Z In the 19th century, building the Canadian Pacific Railroad was a crucial element for successful and profitable trade between populated and developing portions of southern Canada. In the 21st century, that crucial element could be a northern corridor that eases east-west trade through Canada’s North. Two recent Senate reports, supported by federal Transportation Minister Marc Garneau, concluded such a project could “unlock significant economic opportunities for our Country.” We explore this possibility. Canada’s North relies heavily on imports for many important goods and services, especially manufactured products, agricultural goods, and professional and scientific services. While imports account for 28 per cent of spending for Canadian provinces, that figure stands at 35 per cent for the Yukon, 39 per cent for the Northwest Territories and 40 per cent for Nunavut. Exports are also critical, especially for the Northern resource sector, which exports 80 per cent of production compared to 66 per cent for the provinces. But due to its vast geography, sparse population, challenging weather and poor trade infrastructure, the costs of trading are large; the gains liberalization equally so. In this paper, we summarize recent analysis that quantified the magnitude and consequences of trade costs with and between Canada’s territories. We find that while distance matters, it matters much more for the territories. Specifically, we find the per-mile trade costs are 45 per cent larger for the territories than the provinces, suggesting lower quality infrastructure is an important cause. The gains from lowering such costs are large. We find the combined annual GDP of Nunavut, Yukon and the Northwest Territories could increase by nearly $4.7 billion – a massive increase of roughly 50%. A northern corridor providing better trade infrastructure would benefit provinces and territories alike. And while the initial outlay for northern infrastructure including multiple transportation modes would be significant, the long-term gains ... Article in Journal/Newspaper Northwest Territories Nunavut Yukon Directory of Open Access Journals: DOAJ Articles Canada Northwest Territories Nunavut Pacific Yukon
institution Open Polar
collection Directory of Open Access Journals: DOAJ Articles
op_collection_id ftdoajarticles
language English
topic Political institutions and public administration (General)
JF20-2112
spellingShingle Political institutions and public administration (General)
JF20-2112
G. Kent Fellows
Trevor Tombe
Gains from Trade for Canada’s North: The Case of a Northern Infrastructure Corridor
topic_facet Political institutions and public administration (General)
JF20-2112
description In the 19th century, building the Canadian Pacific Railroad was a crucial element for successful and profitable trade between populated and developing portions of southern Canada. In the 21st century, that crucial element could be a northern corridor that eases east-west trade through Canada’s North. Two recent Senate reports, supported by federal Transportation Minister Marc Garneau, concluded such a project could “unlock significant economic opportunities for our Country.” We explore this possibility. Canada’s North relies heavily on imports for many important goods and services, especially manufactured products, agricultural goods, and professional and scientific services. While imports account for 28 per cent of spending for Canadian provinces, that figure stands at 35 per cent for the Yukon, 39 per cent for the Northwest Territories and 40 per cent for Nunavut. Exports are also critical, especially for the Northern resource sector, which exports 80 per cent of production compared to 66 per cent for the provinces. But due to its vast geography, sparse population, challenging weather and poor trade infrastructure, the costs of trading are large; the gains liberalization equally so. In this paper, we summarize recent analysis that quantified the magnitude and consequences of trade costs with and between Canada’s territories. We find that while distance matters, it matters much more for the territories. Specifically, we find the per-mile trade costs are 45 per cent larger for the territories than the provinces, suggesting lower quality infrastructure is an important cause. The gains from lowering such costs are large. We find the combined annual GDP of Nunavut, Yukon and the Northwest Territories could increase by nearly $4.7 billion – a massive increase of roughly 50%. A northern corridor providing better trade infrastructure would benefit provinces and territories alike. And while the initial outlay for northern infrastructure including multiple transportation modes would be significant, the long-term gains ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author G. Kent Fellows
Trevor Tombe
author_facet G. Kent Fellows
Trevor Tombe
author_sort G. Kent Fellows
title Gains from Trade for Canada’s North: The Case of a Northern Infrastructure Corridor
title_short Gains from Trade for Canada’s North: The Case of a Northern Infrastructure Corridor
title_full Gains from Trade for Canada’s North: The Case of a Northern Infrastructure Corridor
title_fullStr Gains from Trade for Canada’s North: The Case of a Northern Infrastructure Corridor
title_full_unstemmed Gains from Trade for Canada’s North: The Case of a Northern Infrastructure Corridor
title_sort gains from trade for canada’s north: the case of a northern infrastructure corridor
publisher University of Calgary
publishDate 2018
url https://doaj.org/article/619313510207479aa5b6d70bb41ed21b
geographic Canada
Northwest Territories
Nunavut
Pacific
Yukon
geographic_facet Canada
Northwest Territories
Nunavut
Pacific
Yukon
genre Northwest Territories
Nunavut
Yukon
genre_facet Northwest Territories
Nunavut
Yukon
op_source The School of Public Policy Publications, Vol 11 (2018)
op_relation https://dev.journalhosting.ucalgary.ca/index.php/sppp/article/view/43342
https://doaj.org/toc/2560-8312
https://doaj.org/toc/2560-8320
2560-8312
2560-8320
https://doaj.org/article/619313510207479aa5b6d70bb41ed21b
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