3‘ 3%? By ED REED Canadian University Press As celestial choirs hummed a strain of O Canada and the pulse of .Canadian na- tionalists everywhere raced quicker, the Herb Gray Report burst upon the coun— try’s consciousness two weeks ago. What the report, or at least the pirate version of it that appeared in Canadian Forum Magazine, told us was that unless something is done in a big hurry, Canada runs the risk of becoming nothing .more 1 than an economic and cultural satellite of the United States. This was hardly news to many Canad- ians who think that this has already hap- pened and have for many years recogniz- ed the omnipresence of the American corporate behemoth in every sphere of the Canadian existence. ' The Revenue’s Minister’s report, for all the uproar it \has caused, is really nothing more than the last gasping at- tempt of a national bourgeoise to reas- sert some ‘measure of control over its own economy. The Gray Report pro- vides no answers. it's a case of far too little much too late. _ ~vStill, what is significant about the re- port to the Cabinet on foreign invest- ment is that it maps the frightening pro- portions of American economic domina- tion and reveals that the Trudeau govern- ment has been forced to develop at least a basic awareness that the problem exists and must somehow be dealt with. The basic strategy which the Gray Re- port recommends to deal with the threat- ened economic and cultural assimilation into the great imperialistic marshmallow to the south. is a screening agency which would review future foreign takeovers and direct investment in Canada. (Direct investment an opposed portfolio invest- ment is defined as actual. legal control of the assets of a corporation rather than merely possession of share equity.) Such a body would have the power to block any new foreign economic move which did not conform to governemut goals regarding Canada's development. The report also deals with the by- rroducts of foreign investment such as its inhibiting effect on the emergence of a distinctive" Canadian cultural identity and the country’s forced dependence on a foreign-developed technology unsuited to its own national needs. Another predictable facet of the re- port is its call for greater support of Canadian industry and" the recommend- ation to home-grown industrialists and ' investors to be less cautious in their sup- port of industrial expansion than they have been in the past. The report says that a major factor retarding the develop- ment of an autonomous capitalist econ- omy has been the innate conservatism of Canadians about investing in their own country. , It now appears that the edited version of the report which Canadian Forum ob- tained by as yet undisclosed means, is very close to the document which Gray presented to the Cabinet some time ago—' and which was to have remained secret. It appears, too, that the document has been used as a base for formulating go- ment policy on foreign ownership. Mitchell Sharp, at the time acting prime minister, admitted in the House of Commons, Nov. 16, that the Cabinet has given approval in principle to the screen- ing agency concept. , The problem with such a scheme, is, of course, that it is very much like shutting the barn door after the horse has escaped. The main value in the Gray Report is its extensive documentation of the scope and dimension of foreign ownership that already exists in this country. The report shows, for example, ‘that the assets of foreign owned firms in Canada amount to at least $50 billion and that at least 58.] per cent of all manufacturing indus- tries are foreign owned—that is a controll- ing concentration of equity in the firm resides in a nation other than Canada. As necessary as it is to prevent any further selloutofou’rindustry or resources, the amount of economic and political power that already rests in foreign hands—- and those hands by a vast majority are American-— will effectively prevent us from ever putting forth any kind of meaningful assertion of our own destiny. The Trudeau government and the class interests it serves—that is the industrial- ists and. financiers-- are not prepared to undertake the kind of drastic structural change in our economic system that would end American economic. cultural and social exploitation of Canada. From the government’s point of view its for- tunes and those of the class it represents are much too closely interwoven with the continued well-being of the mam- moth corporate-industrial empire oper- ating out of the United States. Since the Trudeau government, and in- deed the government of any capitalist country. receives its power and direction from the corporate elite it would have no interest in making any kind of sub- stantial change in these power relation- ships. lt just couldn‘t afford to challenge such a basic element of the status quo as existing American penetration of the Canadian economy. Talk of buying back the Canadian economy under the existing system is ultimately unrealistic. Despite the token step of attempting to retard the rate of foreign takeover of our means of pro- duction. very little is going to change in terms of in whose hands the power to um .w“; \VQYCH /-FLE"5: ' we we: ' .LHT‘ILLSC‘ vupovgn‘ IY ABM”... ‘ 1 make decisions about the lives of Can- adians rests. ' ' - Still, the Gray Report is an-indicator of how far we are from controlling our own economic destinyneven in a straight capitalist sensenand how this is fast be- coming a central reality to members of the government. The man under whose name this re- port was presented is rather an anomal— ous figure to be involved in a study of the dangers of foreign ownership. Herb Gray, the honourable members from Windsor West, gained something of a reputation in the spring of 1969 as being little short of a front man for one of the largest multinational corporations of them all. Ford Motors. At that time he played [a key role in covering up the Liberal government’s .questionable decision to forgive the Ford Motor Company of Canada--whose main Canadian branch plant is in Windsor— more than $75 million in duties it owed resulting from its failure to live up to the terms of the 1965 Canada-US. auto pact. It is not clear at this point exactly what role Gray himself played in the writing of the report. which in the Canadian Forum version has bee-n edited “. . .howdy. . .now y’all open yore books to chapter twenny and we’ll figure in that little ole ever-lovin’ Riel Rebellion. . .okuy?. . ." ,control between 1961 ‘ to 75,000 words fro 000. The research team report was headed by eeonomist,Joel Bell. I upon the knowledge '1 experts employed in the federal civil servi The report, two piling, has been cal prehensive study. of and investment ever country. Some of the res clusions of the rep better understand the exploitation. Among of the observations *A large amount n is being used to finan country’s identity 8 is a slower influx 0 than there has been i report points out, 0 the financing for the 6 Canadian sources. A“ “...If new direct im' entirely excluded fr. control would cent! solute terms, due t