|
May 10, 2002
Nunavut a bonanza for southern
businesses, report says
Nunavut spending creates
4,000 to 9,000 jobs in southern Canada
DENISE
RIDEOUT
OTTAWA The Nunavut
Association of Municipalities is trying hard to challenge the belief among southern
Canadians that Nunavut is nothing more than a drain on the federal governments
treasury.
In fact, they say, Nunavut
is spurring growth in several industries in the South.
In a presentation to the
House of Commons standing committee on finance, the Nunavut Association of Municipalities
unveiled new figures that show the territory is contributing significantly to
the Souths economy.
NAMs president, Keith
Peterson, presented a newly released report, "The Economic Impacts of Nunavut
on the Rest of Canada," to the finance committee on Parliament Hill on
May 2. The finance committee is holding pre-federal budget consultations with
organizations across the country.
The report, which NAM commissioned
the consulting firm KPMG of Toronto to do, shows what Nunavummiut have long
known: they buy many of their goods and services from southern-based businesses.
With few factories or major
industries in Nunavut, stores, businesses and residents turn to the South for
everything from fresh vegetables to furniture and building supplies.
According to the report,
the federal government gave Nunavut $601 million in 1999 under the formula financing
agreement. But that money didnt simply stay in the territory.
Rather, Nunavut turned
around and spent $424 million on goods and services in the South. The following
year, Nunavut imported $450 million worth of goods and services from southern
Canada.
"These numbers show
that Nunavut is not a drain on the federal government," Peterson told the
finance committee members.
As well, the goods and
services Nunavut residents purchased from southern-based companies in 1999 actually
supported between 4,000 and 9,000 person years of employment in the south.
Peterson said theres
a common misunderstanding among southern Canadians and even some federal government
officials that Nunavut is drying up federal funds.
When Nunavut complains
about its lack of housing, health-care facilities, and key infrastructure such
as paved roads and proper water and sewer lines, Peterson said the usual response
is that Nunavut already gets more than its fair share of money.
Peterson said not only
does Nunavut not get an abundance of federal funding, its actually struggling
to get by. "Communities need water plants, desalination plants, roads and
schools the basic things the South already has," he said.
Now, with its new report
in hand, NAM has concrete evidence that money is not just flowing one-way into
Nunavut. Peterson said the report can go a long way toward persuading the federal
government to invest more not less money into the territory.
|