brockm
Active Member
You state that the TSX lead in mining is "because we're the world's richest country in natural resources." That explains the origins of the specialization, but it doesn't explain why Toronto is the go to exchange for resource firms from around the world. We have that position because our large local holdings have created a great deal of expertise in this area. It is not the geographic advantage, but the expertise that today gives the TSX its edge.
This expertise is exactly what the LSE is after, and it is very transportable. It is not just possible but probable that ten years after this deal, most of this expertise will have been transferred to the London offices. With it will go a lot of good paying jobs, and much of our competitive edge in the mining industry. The edge that has helped make so many Canadian mining companies global players.
Even if this were true, and the point is not conceded, it neglects the entire other basis of my argument. The specialization of mining finance is not the whole of Canadian economy, and the upside benefits to almost every other sector in terms of the ability to raise capital would make any loss of "mining finance specialization" to Fleet Street a proverbial drop in the bucket.
I'm sorry. This is another example of Bastiat's What is Seen and What is Not Seen -- also known as the Parable of the Broken Window.
All you are doing is focusing on one thing, to the exclusion of everything else. When you do that in economics, you wreak havoc. Our economy is a diversified service economy. The vast majority of Canadians do not work in the mining sector. At best, they have investments in that sector. And, if as a result, capital investment in the sector improves, the vast majority of Canadian will benefit, even if your worst case scenario comes true.
So, you can colour me unimpressed with your fear-mongering.