Friday, Jan. 11, 1963

The Amazing Mendicant

At election time last June. Canada was in a mess. The country's stock markets plunged downward in Wall Street's wake; the once proud Canadian dollar fell to 92 1/2 U.S. cents, and Canada's foreign exchange holdings fell nearly 50% to a scary low of $1.1 billion. Six days after the election, in which the Conservatives remained in power, but as a minority government. Prime Minister John Diefenbaker suddenly put on the country's most stringent austerity since 1947. Canadian Historian Bruce Hutchison mourned that Canada was "brought to the rim of ruin . . . and became a mendicant."

The mendicant has since done pretty well for himself. By arranging loans and credits of $1.05 billion from such friends as the U.S. and the International Mone tary Fund, by cutting back luxury imports and pushing bargain-priced exports, and by slapping surcharges on tariffs at a time when most other nations are lowering theirs, Canada has done a considerable job of turning its economy around. Totting up accounts. Trade and Commerce Minister George Hees cited evidence as cheerful as his salesman's smile:

sbGross national product grew 9% to $39 billion for the year--a brighter performance than that of the U.S.. Britain or the miracle nations of Europe.

sbUnemployment fell from an average 7.2% of the labor force in 1961 to 5.9%. -- Corporate profits, fattened by 13.9% over the first nine months of 1961, figured to reach $3.8 billion by year's end.

sbExports, nudged by a devalued dollar, rose by 9% to $6.3 billion.

Said Professor Scott Gordon of Ottawa's Carleton University: "It's quite obvious that the financial crisis is well and truly over. The time is ripe, in fact overdue, for the government to take strong expansionist measures."

This file is automatically generated by a robot program, so reader's discretion is required.