ALC GEOGRAPHY
Economics of the United States and Canada
*The
United States and Canada are each the other’s largest trading
partner. Both nations are particularly bound to each other and to
Mexico by the North American Free Trade Agreement, which allows many
good produced in those countries to be traded across their borders
without any tariffs.
*Both the United States and Canada are basically market economies, in
which people can own their own businesses, work how and where they
please, and charge the prices they want, more or less.
*In both nations the government does control the market somewhat, and
has laws regarding safety, discrimination, and other treatment in the
workplace. The government is also a large purchaser of many
important products (like military equipment, especially
aircraft). Thus, both nations have mixed economies, particularly
Canada.
*In Canada, the government also owns and manages health care to a much
greater degree than does the US government. This is known as
socialised medicine. It means that everyone gets access to
medical care, but sometimes it means that the quality of treatment is
lower than in the United States.
*One way to measure a country’s productivity is through its Gross
Domestic Product. GDP is defined as the total value of final
goods and services produced within a country.
*The United States produces almost $12.5 trillion per year (#1 in
GDP). Canada produces just over $1 trillion, making it the 9th
most productive nation in the world.
*The US and Canada were founded by farmers (and fur trappers), but
today farming does not employ many Americans or Canadians. Only
about 2% of the US population still works on farms, and only 4% of the
Canadian. On reason so few people farm any more is that so much
can be done with tractors, fertilisers, and other technological
improvements to agriculture.
*The United States and Canada are major producers of beef, milk, eggs,
corn, wheat, and soybeans (in fact, the USA is the world’s largest
single producer of soy beans). Corn is the USA’s largest crop by
both value and volume, even though in most parts of the world
(including the US) it is used mostly for animal feed.
*About 20% of Americans and Canadians work in manufacturing. For
the most part, Americans and Canadians produce complex machinery such
as aircraft and automobiles, as well as highly technical electronic
equipment; producing processed materials like steel is mostly done
elsewhere now. Both countries also do a lot of food processing.
*The majority of American and Canadian workers are employed in service
industries—about 75% in both countries. Service industries
include government work, teaching, the media, tourism, health care,
banking, real estate, scientific research, and other jobs that do not
directly produce finished goods. This is one reason that the both
countries’ manufacturing turns out so much high tech stuff:
Anglo-America has devoted itself to quality rather than quantity (in
part because the costs of labour are so high in the US and Canada).
*Overall, both countries have post-industrial economies. That
means that both countries have moved beyond the point where most of
their income comes from factory workers.
*The United States exports more good than any other single nation in
the world, although the all the nations of the EU combined do export
more than the US alone: over 10% of the world’s exports come from
the USA.
*However, the US imports goods worth even more than those they export,
creating a trade deficit. Some see this as bad, because it seems
to make the US economy dependent on foreign nations, and also means
that the US sends out more money than it takes in. Others see
this as good, because the US receives tangible products in return for
fiat money.
*Canada has a trade surplus, in large part because it is able to sell so much oil, natural gas, and electricity to the USA.