<<Scrapping the Canadian currency might involve divorcing itself once and
for all time from the Englanders (I believe they still carry images of the
(almost) defunct royal family on their money (some if not all)).  I say
make the provinces into 'associate' states of the United States --
somewhere between a commonwealth and member states ... oh, and, "Welcome !"
A<>E<>R >>



>From wsws.org

WSWS : News & Analysis : North America : Canada

Canadian Parliament debates motion to study scrapping national currency

By Keith Jones
19 March 1999

By a vote of 175 to 67, Canada's House of Commons rejected Monday a motion
to study the creation of a North American monetary union--i.e., to consider
scrapping Canada's national currency, the Canadian dollar.

The motion was introduced by the Bloc Qu�b�cois, which favors Quebec's
secession from the Canadian federal state. Most Tory MPs and 19 of the 49
Reform MPs present in the House joined the BQ in supporting the motion. MPs
from the ruling Liberal Party and the social-democratic New Democratic
Party voted unanimously against.

BQ leader Gilles Duceppe argued that the creation of a monetary union based
on the North American Free Trade zone (which unites Canada, the US and
Mexico) and ultimately embracing all the Americas would be in the interest
of both Quebec and Canada. "Everybody knows our world is evolving toward
three great economic and political blocs," declared Duceppe. "The
development of an economic bloc also supposes--in the rather short
term--the existence of a common currency and common political
institutions." The BQ leader predicted that within 20 years there will be
just three major currencies--the yen, the euro and the US dollar--and
warned that the Canadian government's refusal to recognize the
inevitability of monetary union with the US was making the Canadian dollar
a target of speculators and contributing to economic uncertainty and
instability.

The Liberals and New Democrats attacked the BQ's advocacy of a monetary
union as a ploy aimed at furthering its secessionist agenda and said
Canada's adoption of the US dollar would entail an impermissible loss in
Canadian economic "sovereignty"--that is in the Canadian bourgeoisie's
power to shape fiscal and economic policy. "The Bloc Qu�b�cois is not
talking about a new currency," Finance Minister Paul Martin told reporters
at the conclusion of the debate. "They're talking about ourselves using the
American dollar and being totally subject to American monetary policy.
Given the differences in our economy, it is not an idea that will carry a
lot of weight." For his part, NDP finance critic Nelson Riis derided the BQ
proposal as "a call to be a banana republic."

Unquestionably, the BQ's advocacy of monetary union is self-interested. In
the short term, the Quebec ind�pendantistes hope to deflect concerns about
the financial cost of secession by pointing to the increasingly perilous
state of the Canadian dollar. In the longer term, they hope to use the
economic and political arrangements associated with globalization to forge
new ties with international capital that obviate the need to have Bay
Street and Ottawa act as intermediaries. A monetary union with the US would
go a long way toward insulating Quebec from Canadian financial and economic
pressure in the event of independence. The Scottish National Party, which
advocates an independent Scotland in the European Union, has a similar
strategy.

There was never any question of the BQ motion passing. But, as the vote for
the motion from Tory and Reform MPs indicates, it is not just the advocates
of an independent Quebec who are questioning the continued existence of the
Canadian dollar. In recent months, there have been a spate of newspaper
commentaries that have bluntly questioned the rationale of the Canadian
bourgeoisie maintaining its own currency.

The more perceptive commentators have conceded that Canada is caught
between a rock and a hard place. With the advent of the euro, Canada risks
finding itself outside of an emerging tri-polar monetary system. But in the
Americas, unlike Europe, there is no possibility of a new currency being
created by a large group of countries, of which the most important are
relatively commensurate in terms of the size of their population and
economies. Any monetary union of the Americas, even if it stretched from
Ellesmere Island to Tierra del Fuego, would be a US dollar bloc.

Adding to the anxiety over the future of the Canadian dollar is its
shrinking value. Over the past quarter century, the Canadian dollar has
fallen from par with the US dollar to just above 65 cents US, meaning it
now costs about $1.50 Canadian to buy a US dollar. To the consternation of
much of big business, the Chretien Liberal government failed to
aggressively defend the dollar last year when it came under pressure in the
fallout from the East Asian crisis, allowing it to depreciate by about 7.5
percent.

A declining dollar hits the bourgeoisie, by lowering the value of its
Canadian-denominated assets, by making Canadian companies more susceptible
to foreign takeovers, and by raising the cost of imported machinery and US
dollar denominated borrowings.

The advocates of a strong dollar are pressing the Liberals to attract an
inflow of foreign capital, so as to boost the dollar's value, by slashing
taxes on corporate profits and the rich and by intensifying the assault on
social and public services.

This week National Post editorialist Terence Corcoran, a free-market
ideologue, deplored the Chretien government's indifference to the
devaluation of the dollar in an editorial entitled, "Maybe Canada is for
sale." Wrote Corcoran, "We know Prime Minister Chretien cares little about
the dollar. Good for exports, he says. But it's also good for foreign firms
buying up Canadian companies, and bad for Canadian companies looking to
expand abroad."

* * *


In a related development, Quebec nationalists are seeking to pressure the
pro-separatist Parti Qu�b�cois provincial government to refuse to give
regulatory approval to a reorganization of Canada's stock exchanges,
because it will see the Montreal Stock Exchange (MSE) confined to a niche
market. Under the reorganization, the MSE, Canada's oldest stock exchange,
will gain a monopoly over trading in derivatives in Canada, but will cede
to the Toronto Stock Exchange an exclusive right to trade senior stocks.
Asked Le Devoir's lead editorialist: "Has the Parti Qu�b�cois government,
whose objective is to convince the electorate that independence will allow
us to control development tools, come to the point where it is satisfied
with the status of a regional franchise when it comes to share offerings by
corporations?" Michel Vastel, an ardent nationalist and Le Soleil
columnist, accused the PQ government of reconciling itself to "the crumbs
tossed our way by the Toronto masters."

Proponents of the reorganization note that Montreal's share of Canadian
stock trading has fallen precipitously in the 1990s and warn that unless
Canada's stock exchanges become more efficient they will lose business to
the US and overseas. As it is, Canada's stock exchanges account for a mere
2 percent of world stock market activity.

See Also:
The euro's launch heralds major economic and social conflicts
[21 January 1999]
Canada: Plummeting dollar produces policy split
[1 August 1999]



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