Canada and increasing local
Chinese trade
-DR. ABDUL RUFF COLACHAL
_______________
Canada
is the second largest country in the world after Russia though its population
is only about one-fifth of Russia's. Canada's indigenous peoples make up
around 1,5 million, more than 4% of the population. Nearly 90% of Canadians
live within 200km of the border with the United States, which means that Canada
contains vast expanses of wilderness to the north. The relationship to its
“powerful neighbor” USA is said to be a defining factor for Canada.
Canada
punches well above its population size in economic terms, and is one of the
world's top trading nations. While the service sector dominates, Canada also
has vast oil reserves and is a major exporter of energy, food and minerals.
Close economic integration exists with the US, but Asian markets are growing in
importance.
Canada
follows the British pattern of parliamentary democracy, and the UK monarch is
head of state, represented by a largely ceremonial governor-general.
French-speaking Quebec has wide-ranging cultural and linguistic autonomy.
Canada gradually emerged as a federation of former British colonies, and the
provinces retain extensive powers.
As
a consequence of a flexible foreign policy it has pursued allowing foreigners
to come and settle down in the country, Canada has a vast Asian
population, especially the Chinese and Indian. Richmond is North America's most
Asian city - 50% of residents here identify themselves as Chinese. But it's not
just here that the Chinese community in British Columbia (BC) - some 407,000 strong
- has left its mark. All across Vancouver, Chinese-Canadians have helped shape
the local landscape. Outside the shopping centre of Vancouver suburb known for
its farmland and fishing village, people are queuing at the many Chinese
restaurants. In the local supermarkets, butchers are picking live seafood out
of fish tanks, chopping off the heads, then gutting and packaging them up under
the watchful eye of customers, almost exclusively Chinese-Canadian.
For
centuries, Chinese immigrants have come to Canada for economic opportunities.
It began with the gold rush in northern and central BC in 1858. In the 1880s,
some 6,500 Chinese migrants were directly employed by the Canadian Pacific
Railway (CPR), settling in towns along the railway route, all the way to the
terminus in Vancouver, where the fledgling Chinatown took root (now the
third-largest in North America). But resentment grew among the white working
classes, who saw the migrants as cheap labour, the so-called "yellow
peril" stealing jobs and sullying society. In 1885, the federal government
enacted the first anti-Chinese legislation, imposing a 'head tax' of CAN$50 on every migrant
worker. Under the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1923, immigration ground to a
halt. The ban was lifted in 1947 - due in part to the contribution of
Chinese-Canadian soldiers in WWII - but Mao's red revolution closed the door at
the other end.
Newspaper
headlines and politicians warned of an "Asian invasion"
while the bitter elite coined the phrase 'Hongcouver' to express their dismay
at the perceived Asianisation of their city. The wealth of the newcomers was an
irritation to some in the local community. But attitudes soon began to change,
as they can sell a ton of real estate to this community at a premium and
they're kind of like us. These people like their whiskey straight'.
The
Hong Kong wave subsided after the British handover to China in 1997. Overall,
nearly one-in-five Vancouverites is now of Chinese origin - the
biggest migrant community by far, with some 12,400 new arrivals each year.
Privately, there have been grumblings. In the safety of living rooms or the
anonymity of online forums, old-time Vancouverites blame the Chinese for the
city's sky-high property prices, although experts say there's little evidence
to back up the fears.
The
next significant wave of migrants came in the 1980s and 90s. But they weren't
about to do manual labour or settle in Chinatown with the so-called Chi-eppies
(Chinese elderly people) and Chi-lippies (Chinese low-income people). There was
a largely wealthy class of Hong Kong Chinese who snapped up homes in the
priciest neighborhoods, sent their children to the best schools, and kicked off
a construction boom which transformed downtown Vancouver into a Hong Kong-style
city of skyscrapers.
Exports
to China reached CAN$5.1bn ($5bn/£3.17bn) in 2011, nearly five times their
value in 2001. Other booming industries include agrifoods, minerals, container
traffic, tourism and education. The economic boost has driven a CAN$22bn
($21.6bn/£13.7bn) upgrade in infrastructure along trade corridors with Asia.
"Because of the impact of immigration, Canada as a whole is more resilient
to economic recession and that's undeniable."
The newcomers'
wealth irritated some Vancouver residents. Their sudden impact brought a
sharp backlash. Polite Vancouver society was aghast at the "monster
houses" being built in the old-rich communities of Shaughnessy and
Kerrisdale, often demolishing character homes and tearing down trees in the
process.
Language
is another flashpoint, especially when it comes to older migrants. "There
used to be a time when immigrants to this country were required to know the
language," whispers a woman in a doctor's clinic, as the receptionist
struggles to ask an elderly Chinese man when he last took his heart medication.
A family member has to be contacted by phone before the queue gets moving
again.
There's
concern too that foreign students are taking up places at university, bringing
much-needed bags of cash in foreign student fees.
People in the
globalizing world need to treat the changing society as an opportunity, rather
than a threat.
The future is in
Asia and Vancouver has a very good advantage, which is that of all the Canadian
cities, they are the closest to the “Asia Pacific Rim." Vancouver and
British Columbia are a natural place for many Asian families because of our
diversity. There are countless personal and cultural connections and Canadian
economy and province is richer, more vibrant and attractive for newcomers as a
result," her office said in a statement. For now, BC continues to prosper
from its ties to Asia and its booming economy. For the first time in
2011, the Pacific Rim dislodged the US as British Columbia's biggest trade
partner. With the collapse of the US housing market, lumber exports have
fallen. But demand for coal and natural gas to fuel China's factories is
skyrocketing.
The
way in which Canada’s provincial governments share land and natural resources
with native groups is an ongoing issue. Separatist aspirations in the
predominantly French-speaking province of Quebec have been a major domestic
issue. A referendum in 1995 saw advocates of an independent Quebec only
narrowly defeated. Subsequent opinion polls indicated a fall in support for
independence and the pro-independence Parti Quebecois was defeated in 2003's
provincial election, but regained power in 2012. In a largely symbolic move,
parliament in 2006 agreed that the Quebecois should be considered a
"nation" within a united Canada.
Canada
pursues a flexible foreign policy, though it takes most of the foreign policy
decisions in pursuance of US global agenda.
USA
does not allow any of the NATO member or NATO ally like Pakistan to purse
totally independent foreign or domestic policies and many of them try to
align their polices with those of USA.
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