Tuesday, August 11, 2009

Dollar Dilemma

I was reading a while back about the problems that the rising value of the dollar is creating for Canada’s economic recovery. While this may seem like a problem now, what is going to happen when the world economy really starts to recover and the price of energy rises again. Canada is going to continue to export vast amounts of energy to the US, and this will drive the value of our currency up which will in turn choke off any recovery in the manufacturing sector. Since there is unlikely to be a recovery in Canada without a broad based recovery in the global economy, and such a recovery will inevitably result in higher energy prices, Canada is certain to face this dilemma again, and in a much stronger form in the near future.

Does this mean the end of manufacturing or the export of widely available commodities like timber? It would seem paradoxical that a global economic recovery might actually cause more damage to those sectors instead of helping them to recover but this is certainly a possibility. Is Canada prepared for a world of high energy prices where our currency will almost always be overvalued because of our energy exports?

What impact will this have on the structure of our economy, and what measures are being discussed at the federal and provincial levels to address this looming concern. It seems we are all too focused on throwing money at the problem now, and not focused enough on figuring out what unforeseen consequences will accompany the recovery. We should start asking these questions now so that Canada is not faced with the specter of stagflation in the aftermath of the recovery.

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