By Mark W. Vigoroso E-Commerce Times
03/25/02 10:48 AM PT
E-commerce in Canada showed tremendous year-over-year growth, according to research firm
IDC.
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Canada experienced a spike in e-commerce activity in
2001 and progressed measurably in other e-business
disciplines as well, according to a report released Monday by
the Canadian
E-Business Opportunities Roundtable.
The consortium's final report -- "Fast Forward 3.0:
Maintaining the Momentum" -- showed Canada leading
North America in Internet connectivity.
However, the report suggested
that improvements remain to be made in such areas as
e-business adoption among small and mid-sized
enterprises (SMEs) and venture capital availability.
"It is unusual for a public-private-sector partnership
to work as well as this one did," roundtable
chairperson and iFormation Group CEO David
Pecaut told the E-Commerce Times. "We have
dramatically changed the e-business environment in
Canada."
Overall, officials of the public-private-sector
consortium gave Canada an "A minus" in e-business
adoption.
The Canadian Connection
Despite leading the United States in Internet
penetration in 2001 by a count of 60 percent to 52
percent, Canadian consumers continue to purchase
online much less readily than do Americans, according to the
report.
Just 17 percent of Canadians purchased online last
year, compared with 27 percent of Americans, research
firm IDC said.
But e-commerce in Canada showed tremendous
year-over-year growth, according to IDC, totaling US$26.4
billion in 2001 -- an increase of 69 percent over the
2000 figure of $15.6 billion.
Productivity Gains
The roundtable's third and final report draws on the
activities of five "e-Teams."
The teams focused on closing
the venture capital gap with the United States; facilitating
e-business adoption in small and mid-sized
enterprises; attracting and retaining skilled
e-business talent; accelerating government online; and
promoting Canada's e-business brand globally.
Participants asserted that technology will drive
wealth creation in Canada and that companies must
embrace e-business to bolster productivity.
"Our peer nations in the G8 see e-business
contributing more to our future productivity
growth than any other single factor," said Pierre-Paul
Allard, managing director of Cisco Systems Canada.
"By increasing productivity, Canada can pull ahead of
our U.S. neighbors and take a global leadership
position," Allard noted.
Tax Breaks
Since its inception in 1999, the consortium has
recommended tax changes to improve the climate for
e-business and innovation in Canada.
As a result, the 2000 federal capital gains inclusion
rate dropped from 75 percent to 50 percent, which will
help make corporate tax rates 5 points lower than U.S.
rates by 2005, the report said.
"Canada's future prosperity depends on our ability to
innovate in all sectors and in all
regions of the country," said Minister Allan Rock.
"E-business is a critical tool to meet our innovation
goals."
Seeding New Ventures
Roundtable members -- including representatives from
Sears, IBM (NYSE: IBM) and the Canadian Chamber of Commerce --
agreed that challenges still loom for Canadian e-business.
"Canada has become a more attractive place to invest,"
Pecaut said. "But Canadian pension funds continue to
significantly under-invest in venture capital."
In 2000, 11 percent of new venture capital raised in
Canada came from pension funds committing capital to
Canadian venture funds. But in 2001, that share fell to
3 percent, according to the report.
In comparison, pension funds accounted for 40 percent
of new venture capital commitments in the United States.
Next Phase
What is more, Canadian small and mid-sized
enterprises still lag behind their U.S. counterparts
in terms of e-business adoption, according to Pecaut.
Going forward, a new body -- the Canadian e-Business
Initiative (CeBI) -- will continue the Roundtable's
public-private-sector promotion of e-business
productivity, leadership and innovation.
"My goal for the CeBI is to ensure that a critical
mass of SMEs understand the direct benefits to their
bottom line from implementing e-business," said Nancy
Hughes Anthony, president of the Canadian Chamber of
Commerce and co-chair of the CeBI.
Report: European E-Commerce Growing Fast, But Risks Remain March 19, 2002
Despite rapid adoption of interactive television and widespread use of mobile devices on
the European continent, e-commerce there will be dominated by PC-based shoppers, Gartner
said.
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