Synopses & Reviews
Through a variety of on-the-ground interviews with Canadians on both sides of the Canada/US border, the author analyses how international trade agreements and the free movement of workers and capital are threatening Canada's economic relevance on the world stage. As the Canadian government sits idly by, the question is posed - how can Canada reverse the trend?
Synopsis
In 1999, researcher Paul Kemp set out to examine the controversial issue of Canada's "brain drain," an investigation that took him across Canada and into the United States. Why were so many educated young Canadians forsaking their home country and opting for careers south of the border? Was the promise of greater salaries and opportunities pulling them to the U.S.? Or was Canada - with its higher taxes and risk-averse business culture - simply pushing them away?
The transcripts and insights contained in Goodbye Canada? are the end result of Kemp's research, exploring the inherent strengths and weaknesses of Canada's political and economic cultures from different perspectives. The conclusions he draws should serve as a wake-up call for all Canadians - especially those who deny Canada is facing any sort of national economic threat. The number of highly educated and skilled young people who leave Canada each year has risen at an alarming rate over the past decade. Goodbye Canada? demonstrates that Canada must act quickly to reverse the trend.
About the Author
Paul Kemp is a documentary producer and writer whose credits include the acclaimed television documentary, Canada's Brain Drain. He has conducted close to 300 on-camera television interviews on public affairs issues facing Canada and was a government and economic policy commentator. A University of Manitoba graduate, Paul now resides in Toronto.