Winnipeg Free Press (Newspaper) - June 12, 2012, Winnipeg, Manitoba
C M Y K PAGE B4
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BUSINESS EDITOR: STEVE PONA 697- 7264 business@ freepress. mb. ca I MARKET DETAILS B5,6 I winnipegfreepress. com
TUESDAY, JUNE 12, 2012
B 4
MONTREAL - World leaders wrestling
with mounting debt face a false
choice between fiscal discipline and
economic growth, Prime Minister Stephen
Harper said Monday.
In a speech to an international economic
conference in Montreal, the
Conservative prime minister said the
choice does not need to be between austerity
and prosperity.
" The Canadian approach is what the
world needs, a practical approach and
an approach that works," he told the annual
International Economic Forum of
the Americas.
Ottawa instituted a modest stimulus
package after the 2008 financial and
economic crisis, but has been cutting
spending and expects to balance its
budget in 2015.
It's a message Harper says he intends
to take as Canada's position at the upcoming
G20 summit in Mexico.
The prime minister spoke as a couple
dozen protesters peacefully marched
under the watchful eye of riot police
outside the downtown hotel hosting the
conference.
Montreal has been gripped by months
of demonstrations since the Quebec
government announced an increase in
post- secondary tuition fees.
Political, economic and regulatory officials
from around the world are meeting
at the four- day conference amid the
financial crisis in Europe and concerns
about economic growth around the
world.
Harper said Canada's strong record
of fiscal discipline is one reason it has
weathered the economic crisis much
better than others, fully recovering
lost jobs.
" As Canadians neither are we able,
nor do we desire to, impose our views on
the world, but Canada can demonstrate
through our actions a model that works."
Despite its relatively strong performance,
the country is part of the global
economy and is sometimes at the mercy
of challenges, particularly these days
in the eurozone.
The prime minister applauded European
efforts last weekend to shore up
Spain's banking system, saying he's encouraged
by the agreement.
P UMP prices in Winnipeg could
drop as much as 10 cents a litre
within the next few weeks as
lower crude- oil and wholesale- gasoline
prices finally filter down to the
retail level here.
" It could take three weeks," Michael
Ervin, president of MJ Ervin &
Associates, said in an interview Monday.
" But the decline could be rather
significant - in the order of eight to
10 cents ( per litre), potentially."
It would be a case of better late
than never for Winnipeg motorists,
since pump prices have been dropping
steadily over the last month in
the United States and parts of Eastern
Canada - about six cents a litre
in Toronto and 21.7 cents a gallon in
North Dakota - but have remained
stubbornly high here and in the rest
of Western Canada.
Ervin, whose Calgary- based consulting
firm regularly tracks retail
gas prices in Canada, said prices
should be heading down here because
the factor that's been keeping gas
prices elevated is being corrected.
And that, coupled with a substantial
drop in crude- oil prices over the last
several months, should allow retail
prices to drop throughout Western
Canada.
And barring an unexpected spike
in oil prices, pump prices should remain
fairly stable over the summer,
Ervin said, and maybe even drop a
little more in the fall when demand
for gas traditionally weakens.
While that would be welcome news
for local motorists, two interviewed
Monday said they're not holding their
breath.
" I don't believe it for one minute,"
long- haul truck driver Chris Lajeunesse
said as he stopped to gas up his
car at a Tempo station on Inkster
Boulevard.
Lajeunesse said oil companies are
quick to increase gas prices when
oil prices start climbing, but have a
million reasons why they can't lower
them right away when crude prices
start falling.
" It just seems... there's always
some sort of excuse. But it would be
nice if it does happen."
Shanna- Rae Lee, who stopped for
gas at the same station, was equally
skeptical.
" I'm not sure what to believe. But
I hope they do drop," Lee said, adding
she and her boyfriend have been
putting off a car trip to Minneapolis
because gas was too expensive.
" If prices do come down, we'll be
able to go a lot sooner... " she said.
The CEO of CAA Manitoba said it's
about time pump prices started falling
here.
" If it's going down all around you
( but not here), that's not appropriate,"
Mike Mager said.
" There's got to be a good reason,
and just because B. C. has higher
rates shouldn't mean we in Manitoba
should have to pay higher rates,"
Mager said, adding Manitoba motorists
were also recently hit with a
2.5- cent- a- litre hike in the provincial
tax on gasoline. " To me... somebody
is walking away with extra profits
here, and I think it's the big oil companies."
Not so, according to Ervin, whose
firm consults for the petroleum industry,
and Bill Simpkins, spokesman
for the Canadian Petroleum Products
Institute, which represents oil refineries.
They said buyers and sellers of gasoline
futures determine wholesale
prices based on supply and demand.
When supplies are tight, that drives
up prices. And what happens with
wholesale prices has more impact on
retail prices than fluctuations in oil
prices, they said, although oil prices
do affect them to some degree.
They said the reason wholesale
prices have stayed high in Western
Canada is because a fire last February
knocked out production at a
refinery in Washington state that
supplies the Vancouver market. It's
only in the last couple of weeks that
BP PLC's Cherry Point refinery has
come back online, they said. And
with it producing gas again, that will
boost supplies on the West Coast and
allow wholesale prices to fall across
the west.
Simpkins said if it's any consolation,
Winnipeggers were already
paying less for gasoline than motorists
in most parts of Eastern Canada.
So the price declines there have just
brought their prices more in line with
prices here.
" The good news is your prices
aren't far off the prices for other
parts of the country."
murray. mcneill@ freepress. mb. ca
Continued
Please see FORUM B 6
Prices explained
HERE'S the Canadian Petroleum
Products Institute's explanation
for why high wholesale prices in
Vancouver drive up prices in the
rest of Western Canada:
When a disruption in gas supplies
drives up wholesale prices in Vancouver,
buyers and sellers of gasoline
futures usually bid up prices
in the other western provinces
to maintain a balanced market.
Otherwise, you could see truckloads
of Prairie gasoline being hauled to
the West Coast to take advantage
of the higher prices there, and that
could create shortages in the rest of
the region.
Gas- pain relief coming
By Murray McNeill
May drop
by 10 cents
within weeks
Prudence,
growth
can both
exist: PM
Canadian approach
works, he tells forum
By Ross Marowits
PHIL HOSSACK / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS
Long- haul trucker Chris Lajeunesse
says there are always reasons for gas
prices to climb.
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