PROFILE
OFFICIAL NAME:
Canada
Geography
Area: 9.9 million sq. km. (3.8 million sq.
mi.); second-largest country in the world.
Cities: Capital--Ottawa (pop. 1.1
million). Other major cities--Toronto
(4.7 million), Montreal (3.4 million), Vancouver
(2.0 million).
Terrain: Mostly plains with mountains in the
west and lowlands in the southeast.
Climate: Temperate to arctic.
People
Nationality: Noun and adjective--Canadian(s).
Population (2006 estimate): 32.4 million.
Ethnic groups: British/Irish 28%, French 23%,
other European 15%, Asian/Arab/African 6%,
indigenous Amerindian 2%, mixed background 26%.
Religions: Roman Catholic 44.4%, Protestant 29%,
other Christian 4.2%, Muslim 2%, other 4%.
Languages: English, French.
Education: Literacy--99% of population
aged 15 and over has at least a ninth-grade
education.
Health: Infant mortality rate--5.2/1,000.
Life expectancy--77.1 yrs. male, 82.2
yrs. female.
Work force (2005, 16.3 million): Goods-producing
sector: 25%, of which: manufacturing 15%;
construction 6%; agriculture 2%; natural
resources 2%; utilities 1%. Service-producing
sector: 75%, of which: trade 16%; health care
and social assistance 11%; educational services
7%, accommodation and food services 7%;
professional, scientific, and technical services
7%; finance 6%; public administration 5%;
transportation and warehousing 5%; information,
culture, and recreation 5%; other services 4%.
Government
Type: Confederation with parliamentary
democracy.
Confederation: July 1, 1867.
Constitution: The amended British North America
Act of 1867 patriated to Canada on April 17,
1982, Charter of Rights and Freedoms, and
unwritten custom.
Branches: Executive--Queen Elizabeth II
(head of state represented by a governor
general), prime minister (head of government),
cabinet. Legislative--bicameral
parliament (308-member House of Commons;
105-seat Senate). Judicial--Supreme
Court.
Federal-level political parties: Liberal Party,
Conservative Party of Canada, Bloc Quebecois,
New Democratic Party.
Subdivisions: 10 provinces, 3 territories.
Economy
Nominal GDP (2005): $1.077 trillion.
Real GDP growth rate (2005): 2.8%.
Nominal per capita GDP (2005): $32,800.
Natural resources: Petroleum and natural gas,
hydroelectric power, metals and minerals, fish,
forests, wildlife, abundant fresh water.
Agriculture: Products--wheat, livestock
and meat, feed grains, oil seeds, dairy
products, tobacco, fruits, vegetables.
Industry: Types--motor vehicles and
parts, machinery and equipment, aircraft and
components, other diversified manufacturing,
fish and forest products, processed and
unprocessed minerals.
Trade: Merchandise exports (2005, FOB
basis)--$364.8 billion: crude petroleum and
products, natural gas, motor vehicles and spare
parts, lumber, wood pulp and newsprint, crude
and fabricated metals, wheat. In 2005, 85% of
Canadian exports went to the United States.
Merchandise imports (2005, FOB
basis)--$317.7 billion: motor vehicles and
parts, industrial machinery, crude petroleum,
chemicals, agricultural machinery. In 2005, 59%
of Canadian imports came from the United States.
U.S.-CANADA RELATIONS
The relationship between the United States
and Canada is probably the closest and most
extensive in the world. It is reflected in the
staggering volume of bilateral trade--the
equivalent of $1.4 billion a day in goods,
services, and investment income--as well as in
people-to-people contact, with well over 100
million crossings of the U.S.-Canadian border
every year. In fields ranging from law
enforcement cooperation to environmental
cooperation to free trade, the two countries
work closely on multiple levels from federal to
local. In addition to their close bilateral
ties, Canada and the U.S. work closely through
multilateral fora.
Canada--a charter signatory to the United
Nations and the North Atlantic Treaty
Organization (NATO)--takes an active role in the
United Nations, including peacekeeping
operations, and participates in the Organization
for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE).
Canada joined the Organization of American
States (OAS) in 1990 and hosted the OAS General
Assembly in Windsor in June 2000, and the third
Summit of the Americas in Quebec City in April
2001. Canada seeks to expand its ties to Pacific
Rim economies through membership in the
Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation forum (APEC),
and will host the winter Olympic Games in
Vancouver-Whistler, British Columbia in 2010.
Although Canada views good relations with the
U.S. as crucial to a wide range of interests, it
occasionally pursues independent policies at
odds with the United States. In 2003, Canada did
not participate in the U.S.-led military
coalition that liberated Iraq (although it has
contributed financially to Iraq’s reconstruction
and provided electoral advice). Other examples
are Canada’s leadership in the creation of the
UN-created International Criminal Court (ICC)
for war crimes--which the U.S. opposes due to
fundamental flaws in the treaty that leave the
ICC vulnerable to exploitation and politically
motivated prosecutions--and Canada’s decision in
early 2005 not to participate directly in the
U.S. missile defense program. The United States
and Canada also differ on the issue of
landmines. Canada is a strong proponent of the
Ottawa Convention, which bans the use of
anti-personnel mines. The United States, while
the world’s leading supporter of demining
initiatives, declined to sign the treaty due to
unmet concerns regarding the protection of its
forces and allies, particularly those serving on
the Korean Peninsula, as well as the lack of
exemptions for mixed munitions.
U.S. defense arrangements with Canada are
more extensive than with any other country. The
Permanent Joint Board on Defense, established in
1940, provides policy-level consultation on
bilateral defense matters and the United States
and Canada share NATO mutual security
commitments. In addition, U.S. and Canadian
military forces have cooperated since 1958 on
continental air defense within the framework of
the North American Aerospace Defense Command (NORAD).
The military response to the terrorist attacks
of September 11, 2001 both tested and
strengthened military cooperation between the
United States and Canada. The new NORAD
Agreement that entered into force on May 12,
2006 added a maritime domain awareness component
and is of “indefinite duration,” albeit subject
to periodic review. Since 2002, Canada has
participated in joint military actions in
Afghanistan. Approximately 2,300 Canadian Forces
personnel are deployed in southern Afghanistan
under a battle group based at Kandahar airfield
and the Canadian-led Multi National Brigade for
Regional Command South in Kandahar and as
members of the Canadian-led Provincial
Reconstruction Team (PRT) at Camp Nathan Smith
in Kandahar. Canada has committed to maintain
the PRT until February 2007 and to remain active
in Afghanistan until at least 2009. Canada has
also contributed to stabilization efforts in
Haiti, initially with troops and later with
civilian police and electoral assistance, and
humanitarian and developmental aid.
The U.S. and Canada also work closely to
resolve transboundary environmental issues, an
area of increasing importance in the bilateral
relationship. A principal instrument of this
cooperation is the International Joint
Commission (IJC), established as part of the
Boundary Waters Treaty of 1909 to resolve
differences and promote international
cooperation on boundary waters. The Great Lakes
Water Quality Agreement of 1972 is another
historic example of joint cooperation in
controlling transboundary water pollution. The
two governments also consult semiannually on
transboundary air pollution. Under the Air
Quality Agreement of 1991, both countries have
made substantial progress in coordinating and
implementing their acid rain control programs
and signed an annex on ground level ozone in
2000. In June 2003, Canada and the U.S.
announced a new border air quality initiative
designed to increase cooperation in combating
cross-border air pollution, including
particulate matter. Three regional projects have
been completed.
Canada ratified the Kyoto Accord at the end
of 2002, despite concern among business groups
and others that compliance would place Canada’s
economy at a lasting competitive disadvantage
vis-à-vis the United States. Canada’s federal
government has committed about $1.8 billion over
seven years to achieving greenhouse gas emission
reductions, plus modest additional funds for
research and long-term technology development.
Canada participates in the U.S.-led
International Carbon Sequestration Leadership
Forum, which researches effective ways to
capture and store carbon dioxide. Canada is also
a founding member of the International
Partnership for the Hydrogen Economy and the
Global Earth Observation System of Systems, both
of which are designed to address climate change
and are supported by the U.S. In early 2005,
Canada joined the U.S.-led Methane to Markets
initiative, which focuses on transferring
technology to developing countries for the
capture and use of methane from pipelines,
landfills and other sources. In late 2005,
Canada hosted the United Nations Climate Change
Conference in Montreal.
While law enforcement cooperation and
coordination were excellent prior to the
terrorist attacks on the United States of
September 11, they have since become even closer
through such mechanisms as the Cross Border
Crime Forum. Canada, like the United States, has
strengthened its laws and realigned resources to
fight terrorism. U.S.-Canada bilateral and
multilateral cooperation in the fight is
exemplary. Canada is a significant source for
the United States of marijuana, as well as
precursor chemicals and over-the-counter drugs
that are used to produce illicit synthetic
drugs. Implementation and strengthening of
regulations in Canada and increased
U.S.-Canadian law enforcement cooperation have
had a substantial impact in reducing trafficking
of precursor chemicals and synthetic drugs, but
cannabis cultivation, because of its
profitability and relatively low risk of
penalty, remains a thriving industry. Canada
increased maximum penalties for methamphetamine
offenses in August 2005 and implemented new
controls over various precursors in November
2005.
Canada is a major foreign aid donor and
targets its annual assistance of nearly $3
billion toward priority sectors such as good
governance; health (including HIV/AIDS); basic
education; private-sector development; and
environmental sustainability.
Prime Minister Harper, who has said he
intends to bring a new, more positive tone to
bilateral relations while still defending
Canadian interests, held his first meeting with
President Bush at the March 30-31, 2006 Security
and Prosperity Partnership of North America
meeting in Cancun, Mexico. Prime Minister Harper
is expected to visit Washington, DC in early
July 2006.
Trade and Investment
The United States and Canada enjoy an
economic partnership unique in the world. The
two nations share the world’s largest and most
comprehensive trading relationship, which
supports millions of jobs in each country. In
2005, total trade between the two countries was
approximately $500 billion. The two-way trade
that crosses the Ambassador Bridge between
Michigan and Ontario equals all U.S. exports to
Japan. Canada's importance to the United States
is not just a border-state phenomenon: Canada is
the leading export market for 39 of the 50 U.S.
States, and ranked in the top three for another
8 States. In fact, Canada is a larger market for
U.S. goods than all 25 countries of the European
Community combined, whose population is more
than 15 times that of Canada.
The comprehensive U.S.-Canada Free Trade
Agreement (FTA), which went into effect in 1989,
was superseded by the North American Free Trade
Agreement among the United States, Canada and
Mexico (NAFTA) in 1994. NAFTA, which embraces
the 406 million people of the three North
American countries, expanded upon FTA
commitments to move toward reducing trade
barriers and establishing agreed upon trade
rules. It has also resolved long-standing
bilateral irritants and liberalized rules in
several areas, including agriculture, services,
energy, financial services, investment, and
government procurement. Since the implementation
of NAFTA in 1994, total two-way merchandise
trade between the United States and Canada has
more than doubled, creating many new challenges
for the bilateral relationship. The Security and
Prosperity Partnership of North America,
launched by all three NAFTA countries in March
2005, represents an effort to address these
challenges and others on a continental basis.
Canada is an urban services-dependent economy
with a large manufacturing base. Since Canada is
the largest export market for most states, the
U.S.-Canada border is extremely important to the
well-being and livelihood of millions of
Americans.
The U.S. is Canada's leading agricultural
market, taking nearly one-third of all food
exports. However, imports of Canadian livestock
products, particularly ruminants, fell
drastically after the discovery of a single case
of bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE, mad
cow disease) in spring 2003. Shipments of most
Canadian beef to the U.S. were resumed in late
2003 and trade in live cattle under 30 months
resumed in July 2005. Conversely, Canada is the
second-largest U.S. agricultural market (after
Japan), primarily importing fresh fruits and
vegetables and livestock products.
The U.S. and Canada enjoy the largest energy
trade relationship in the world. Canada is the
single largest foreign supplier of energy to the
United States--providing 17% of U.S. oil imports
and 18% of U.S. natural gas demand. Recognition
of the commercial viability of Canada’s oil
sands has raised Canada’s proven petroleum
reserves to 175 billion barrels, making it the
world’s second-largest holder of reserves after
Saudi Arabia. The electricity grids of the
United States and Canada are closely linked and
meet jointly developed reliability standards.
Quebec is a major source of electricity for New
England.
While 98% of U.S.-Canada trade flows
smoothly, there are frequent bilateral trade
disputes over the remaining 2%. Usually,
however, these issues are managed through
bilateral consultative forums or referral to
World Trade Organization (WTO) or NAFTA dispute
resolution procedures. For example, in response
to WTO challenges by the United States, the U.S.
and Canadian Governments negotiated an agreement
on magazines providing increased access for the
U.S. publishing industry to the Canadian market,
and Canada amended its patent laws to extend
patent protection to 20 years. Canada has a
number of challenges pending in NAFTA and WTO
dispute settlement mechanisms related to U.S.
trade remedy law, including against actions
taken by the U.S. Government on softwood lumber.
However, the two countries recently agreed on
the general terms of a negotiated settlement on
softwood lumber, which is in the process of
being finalized. The U.S. and Canada resolved a
WTO dispute over dairy products in 2003. The
United States and Canada also have resolved
several major issues involving fisheries. By
common agreement, the two countries submitted a
Gulf of Maine boundary dispute to the
International Court of Justice in 1981; both
accepted the Court's October 12, 1984 ruling
that delineated much of the boundary between the
two countries’ Exclusive Economic Zones (EEZs).
The United States and Canada signed a Pacific
Salmon Agreement in June 1999 that settled
differences over implementation of the 1985
Pacific Salmon Treaty. In 2001, the two
countries reached agreement on Yukon River
Salmon, implementing a new abundance-based
resource management regime and effectively
realizing coordinated management over all West
Coast salmon fisheries. The United States and
Canada recently reached agreement on sharing
another transboundary marine resource, Pacific
Hake. The two countries also have a treaty on
the joint management of Albacore Tuna in the
Pacific, and closely cooperate on a range of
bilateral fisheries issues and international
high seas governance initiatives.
U.S. immigration and customs inspectors
provide preclearance services at seven airports
in Canada, allowing air travelers direct
connections in the United States, and
preclearance operations will begin in Halifax in
fall 2006. In 2004, nearly 19 million passengers
flew between the U.S. and Canada. Air traffic is
expected to increase further once the bilateral
Open Skies agreement removing all economic
restrictions on civil aviation services between
Canada and the U.S. goes into effect later this
year. The two countries also share in operating
the St. Lawrence Seaway, connecting the Great
Lakes to the Atlantic Ocean.
Canada and the U.S. have one of the world’s
largest investment relationships. The U.S. is
Canada's largest foreign investor. Statistics
Canada reports that at the end of 2004, the
stock of U.S. foreign direct investment in
Canada was $175 billion, or about 65% of total
foreign direct investment in Canada. U.S.
investment is primarily in Canada's mining and
smelting industries, petroleum, chemicals, the
manufacture of machinery and transportation
equipment, and finance.
Canada is the seventh-largest foreign
investor in the United States. At the end of
2004, the U.S. Commerce Department estimates
that Canadian investment in the United States,
including investments from Canadian holding
companies in the Netherlands, was $134 billion
at historical cost basis. Canadian investment in
the United States is concentrated in
manufacturing, wholesale trade, real estate,
petroleum, finance, and insurance and other
services.
Principal U.S. Embassy Officials
Ambassador--David
H. Wilkins
Deputy Chief of Mission--John Dickson
Minister-Counselor for Political Affairs--Brian
Flora
Minister-Counselor for Economic Affairs--Brian
Mohler
Minister-Counselor for Public Affairs--James
Williams
Minister-Counselor for Commercial
Affairs--Thomas Lee Boam
Minister-Counselor for Consular Affairs--Keith
Powell
Counselor for Environment, Science, Technology,
and Health--Curtis Stone
Defense Attache--Col. David Brackett
Consul General Vancouver--Lewis Lukens
Consul General Calgary --Naim Ahmed
Consul General Toronto--John Nay
Consul General Montreal--Mary Marshall
Consul General Quebec--Abigail Friedman
Consul General Halifax--Leonard Hill
Consul Winnipeg--Todd Schwartz
The
U.S. Embassy in Canada is located at 490
Sussex Drive, Ottawa, Ontario. The mailing
address is P.O. Box 866, Station B, Ottawa,
Ontario, K1P 5T1 (tel. 613-238-5335).
GOVERNMENT
Canada is a constitutional monarchy with a
federal system, a parliamentary government, and
strong democratic traditions. The 1982 Charter
of Rights and Freedoms guarantees basic rights
in many areas. Queen Elizabeth II, as Queen of
Canada, serves as a symbol of the nation's
unity. She appoints a governor general, who
serves as her representative in Canada, on the
advice of the prime minister of Canada, usually
for a 5-year term. The prime minister is the
leader of the political party in power and is
the head of the cabinet. The cabinet remains in
office as long as it retains majority support in
the House of Commons on major issues.
Canada's parliament consists of an elected
House of Commons and an appointed Senate.
Legislative power rests with the 308-member
Commons, which is elected for a period not to
exceed 5 years. The prime minister may ask the
governor general to dissolve parliament and call
new elections at any time during that period.
Vacancies in the 105-member Senate, whose
members serve until the age of 75, are filled by
the governor general on the advice of the prime
minister. Recent constitutional initiatives have
sought unsuccessfully to strengthen the Senate
by making it elective and assigning it a greater
regional representational role. Also under
discussion is an initiative to place term limits
upon Senators.
Criminal law, based largely on British law,
is uniform throughout the nation and is under
federal jurisdiction. Civil law is also based on
the common law of England, except in Quebec,
which has retained its own civil code patterned
after that of France. Justice is administered by
federal, provincial, and municipal courts.
Each province is governed by a premier and a
single, elected legislative chamber. A
lieutenant-governor appointed by the governor
general represents the Crown in each province.
Principal Government Officials
Head of State--Queen Elizabeth II
Governor General--Michaelle Jean
Prime Minister--Stephen Harper
Minister of Foreign Affairs--Peter MacKay
Ambassador to the United States--Michael Wilson
Ambassador to the United Nations--Allan Rock (to
be replaced by John McNee)
Canada maintains an
embassy in the United States at 501
Pennsylvania Avenue, NW, Washington, DC 20001
(tel. 202-682-1740).
POLITICAL CONDITIONS
On February 6, 2006, Stephen Harper was sworn in
as Canada’s twenty-second Prime Minister,
succeeding Liberal Party leader Paul Martin. An
admitted "policy specialist," Harper rose from
the ranks of conservative political party
staffers. Prior to becoming Prime Minister, he
sat as a Member of Parliament, including as
Leader of the Opposition since 2002 when he
became head of the western-based Canadian
Alliance. He was elected the first leader of the
Conservative Party of Canada when it was created
in 2003 through the merger of Canadian Alliance
and Peter MacKay’s Progressive Conservative
Party. The January 23, 2006 election victory by
the Conservative Party ended twelve years of
Liberal Party rule that, in the end, was tainted
by corruption and ethics concerns, despite the
economic progress Canada achieved while the
Liberals were in power.
In the January 2006 elections, the
Conservatives made unexpected gains in Quebec,
winning ten seats. Many observers have noted how
a reinvigorated Conservative option in Quebec
represents a boost for national unity. Harper’s
government is in a minority position in the
House of Commons, however, and has a slimmer
minority than was enjoyed by the preceding
Liberal government. The Conservatives now hold
125 seats and the Liberals 102. The separatist
Bloc Quebecois (BQ) has a majority (51) of
Quebec’s 75 seats (the BQ offers candidates only
in Quebec). The left-leaning New Democratic
Party (NDP) increased its seat count to 29, but
fell short of the number that would have
guaranteed it the power broker role it played in
the previous Liberal minority government.
Prime Minister Harper’s Conservatives began
the 39th Parliament in the spring of
2006 with several objectives that were featured
during the election campaign: accountability and
ethics in government; cutting the federal
value-added sales tax; measures to fight crime
and urban violence; reducing wait times for
medical procedures in Canada’s national health
system; and providing a tax credit to parents
for young children’s day care. Harper’s Cabinet
choices on February 6 included his Quebec
advisor and campaign co-chair Michael Fortier,
who was appointed to the Senate and given the
portfolio for the Department of Public Works and
Government Services, and former Liberal Industry
Minister David Emerson, who crossed the floor
immediately after the election to become the
Conservative Government’s Minister of
International Trade. Former Deputy Opposition
leader Peter MacKay was named Foreign Minister.
In Canada's political system, a key challenge
for any federal government is balancing the
conflicting interests of Canada’s 10 provinces
and 3 territories. Recognizing the advantages of
a coordinated approach in dealing with the
federal government, the provinces and
territories created a Council of the Federation
in 2003, with their leaders (Canada’s premiers)
meeting regularly in that forum to develop
common positions.
Quebec, which represents 23% of the national
population (and has a similar proportion of
seats in the House of Commons), seeks to
preserve its distinctive francophone nature, and
is perceived by the less-populous western
provinces as wielding undue influence on the
Federal Government. At least until January
2006’s election of Albertan Stephen Harper as
Prime Minister, the western provinces had
sometimes expressed concern that their interests
were not fully attended to by Ottawa. Ontario,
for its part, believes that it pays out
significantly more to the Federal Government
than it gets back in revenues; and the Atlantic
provinces seek to assert greater control over
fishing and mineral rights off their shores. The
Federal Government, which had been led by the
Liberal Party from 1993 until February 2006, has
ceded some power in a few areas of provincial
jurisdiction, while seeking to strengthen the
federal role in many other areas such as
inter-provincial trade and the regulation of
securities. Former Prime Minister Martin’s
minority government made significant concessions
to the provinces, including a revenue sharing
agreement with the Atlantic provinces over
offshore energy earnings, and a revenue transfer
agreement with Ontario. In the September 2004
First Minister’s conference, Martin made a CN$41
billion (approximately U.S. $37 billion) health
care transfer deal to the provinces. This
included a separate deal for Quebec that came to
be seen as reinforcing "asymmetric federalism,"
a view that accepts that not all provinces must
be treated the same by the Federal Government to
be treated equitably. Prior to the health
agreement, reduced federal support to the
provinces for health care services had been a
major point of contention between provincial
leaders and the previous Liberal governments, as
it was perceived to have contributed to
sustained fiscal deficits in many provinces
while the Federal Government ran sustained
surpluses (the so-called "vertical fiscal
imbalance").
National Unity
The election in April 2003 of Premier Jean
Charest and the Liberal Party of Quebec to
govern Canada’s second most populous province
was a significant victory for the federal
government, which over the years has struggled,
under the threat of secession, to accommodate
the aspirations of the French-speaking province.
Though for now most Quebec voters seem to
appreciate the economic benefits of remaining in
the confederation and prefer seeking to advance
their separate francophone identity within that
confederation, a sizeable, fluctuating number of
Quebec voters still identify themselves as
desiring "sovereignty," although the precise
meaning of the term in a Quebec context remains
ambiguous. That number can fluctuate anywhere
from 45%-51%, and it is largely event-driven.
For example, anger over the "sponsorship"
program reignited talk of sovereignty in 2005,
while Prime Minister Harper’s talk of “open
federalism” has brought the numbers back down.