Yesterday, I published my 100th blog post. Today, this is my farewell message to you as I will be leaving to take up an assignment in Montréal as executive director of the combined fundraising campaign at the Université de Montréal, HEC (business school), and École Polytechnique (engineering school). I will also do some teaching in the business school and in the political science department.
Over 70% of the blogs I wrote were meant to talk about Québec and its priorities in the U.S. – offering solutions in energy options, the environment, security, promoting culture, solving border issues, working for greater commercial and economic exchanges, sharing expertise, and developing networks aimed at fostering greater cooperation. Some of the other blogs emphasized our affinities – the moments that brought us together, the values we share, the common goals we pursue. It was a great privilege to have shared these views through social media.
As I move on, I would like to repeat how much I admire the U.S. and the American people. Your love of country is especially inspiring. I was welcomed as a neighbor and a friend, and will always cherish my time in this great land.
New York City deserves special mention. It is said to be the financial capital of the world but it is also the cultural capital. The creativity and ingenuity here is second to none. I should add that NYC made me see first hand how immigration is a powerful force in a free society. It is so enriching to see how people coming from different lands and having their own story help build such an enviable society.
I return with a sense that my team and I did what was expected of us, and that we were privileged to have served Québec. As a Canadian and a Quebecer, I have also come to realize how blessed we are to live on a continent where freedom, compassion, respect, and belief in the individual are the hallmarks of our common destiny.
Farewell to you all. Au revoir.
Et je remercie de tout cœur le personnel de la Délégation générale du Québec à New York, le bureau du Québec à Washington, et le Ministère des relations internationales pour votre soutien, votre grand professionnalisme et votre grande compétence. Un merci tout particulier au Premier Ministre Jean Charest et au gouvernement du Québec pour leur confiance et leur appui constant.
Merci. Thank you. Muchas gracias.
January 5, 2012
January 4, 2012
Jobs: The Priority in 2012
What follows is my 100th and final blog post in my role as Québec’s Delegate General.
When I was appointed in September 2009, the economic recession affecting much of the developed world had statistically ended. The following two years have featured some job growth, but the economic recovery has been generally anemic when compared to more recent post-recessions.
In Canada, and specifically Québec, we have recovered more than the jobs lost in the recession. This was due largely to the fact that we had no financial meltdown and no housing bubble. The situation was far more complicated in the U.S. where job recovery from the last recession hovers around the 20% mark. Unemployment is still stubbornly high.
True, the American economy has had job growth since late 2009, and it can be argued that the Obama administration prevented a depression with consequences possibly greater than the Great Depression of the 1930s. As the country enters the next presidential cycle, it is obvious that the economy will be central, and jobs, or lack of them, will be the issue.
The situation in Canada may have been less damaging, and the Canadian prospects for 2012 rank among the highest in the G7 countries. Yet, the persistence of slow growth in the U.S. and fears of a European recession are starting to be felt northward. Unemployment has slowly edged upward in the last quarter.
With elections a possibility in Québec in 2012, it is expected that jobs will also be at the forefront of the political contest there. Whatever the electoral circumstance, however, 2012 must become the year where public policies are aimed at creating wealth, and jobs become the key element in the process.
Since 2002, Québec and New York State have met regularly to explore ways to better integrate our economic activities and build common prosperity. New York State is Québec’s number one trading partner, and it exports more to Québec than to India, Italy, and Brazil all together. We share common and secure borders, we are stable democracies, and have close, integrated economic activities. The expectation is that the next Québec-New York economic summit will be concentrated on how to create jobs in both jurisdictions that are sustainable and create wealth.
Trade, innovation, technology, energy, education, infrastructure building and renovation represent the sectors where there is the most promise for building the future. Resisting protectionist measures, making our tax structure competitive, providing investment incentives, sharing expertise, and looking to ways to propel our respective economies will be essential to the next summit and should be at the heart of the exercise to build a better future together. At the end of the day, the goal is simple: create jobs.
When I was appointed in September 2009, the economic recession affecting much of the developed world had statistically ended. The following two years have featured some job growth, but the economic recovery has been generally anemic when compared to more recent post-recessions.
In Canada, and specifically Québec, we have recovered more than the jobs lost in the recession. This was due largely to the fact that we had no financial meltdown and no housing bubble. The situation was far more complicated in the U.S. where job recovery from the last recession hovers around the 20% mark. Unemployment is still stubbornly high.
True, the American economy has had job growth since late 2009, and it can be argued that the Obama administration prevented a depression with consequences possibly greater than the Great Depression of the 1930s. As the country enters the next presidential cycle, it is obvious that the economy will be central, and jobs, or lack of them, will be the issue.
The situation in Canada may have been less damaging, and the Canadian prospects for 2012 rank among the highest in the G7 countries. Yet, the persistence of slow growth in the U.S. and fears of a European recession are starting to be felt northward. Unemployment has slowly edged upward in the last quarter.
With elections a possibility in Québec in 2012, it is expected that jobs will also be at the forefront of the political contest there. Whatever the electoral circumstance, however, 2012 must become the year where public policies are aimed at creating wealth, and jobs become the key element in the process.
Since 2002, Québec and New York State have met regularly to explore ways to better integrate our economic activities and build common prosperity. New York State is Québec’s number one trading partner, and it exports more to Québec than to India, Italy, and Brazil all together. We share common and secure borders, we are stable democracies, and have close, integrated economic activities. The expectation is that the next Québec-New York economic summit will be concentrated on how to create jobs in both jurisdictions that are sustainable and create wealth.
Trade, innovation, technology, energy, education, infrastructure building and renovation represent the sectors where there is the most promise for building the future. Resisting protectionist measures, making our tax structure competitive, providing investment incentives, sharing expertise, and looking to ways to propel our respective economies will be essential to the next summit and should be at the heart of the exercise to build a better future together. At the end of the day, the goal is simple: create jobs.
Publié par
John Parisella
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