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Doing Business with Canadian Aboriginal Communities. Breakfast Seminar Canadian German Chamber of Commerce November 16, 2011. Overview. Who are Canada ’ s Aboriginal Peoples Aboriginal Economic Footprint Challenges and Opportunities Overcoming Challenges through positive relationships.
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Doing Business with Canadian Aboriginal Communities Breakfast Seminar Canadian German Chamber of Commerce November 16, 2011
Overview • Who are Canada’s Aboriginal Peoples • Aboriginal Economic Footprint • Challenges and Opportunities • Overcoming Challenges through positive relationships
Aboriginal peoples • Aboriginal peoples of Canada, as defined by the Constitution Act, 1982, comprise the Indian, Inuit and Métis peoples of Canada. • Each distinct group has unique heritages, languages, cultures. • Over one million people identify as Aboriginal with 2/3 North American Indian; 30% Metis; 5% Inuit • 45% growth btwn 1996-2006 (higher birth rate, longer life expectancy) • Fastest growing population; median age 22-25; 1/3 under 15 yrs of age
Aboriginal Economic Footprint • If Aboriginal communities are to prosper, they must develop viable business opportunities which can lead to increased Aboriginal employment • Combined income of Aboriginal households, business and govt sectors is expected to reach $32 billion by 2016 (TD Economics and CCAB) • Aboriginal economic development corporations (EDCs) contribute about 37% to aggregate annual income • 72% of EDCs have been in operation for 10 yrs + with annual sales revenues of $5 million or more
International Business aspirations “First Nations recognize the growing importance of Asian markets, and the opportunity to seek out a competitive advantage to expand economic opportunities for First Nations and all of Canada.” -- “First Nations have innovative plans for community-based sustainable economic development,” …“and we are reaching out to partners nationally and internationally for opportunities that work for our peoples and communities.” National Chief, AFN, Sean Atleo
ABORIGINAL ENTREPRENEURS • In 2006, 34,045 Aboriginals self-employed (up 25%) • Metis are largest self-employed group (almost 50%) • First Nations are second at 45% • Inuit have less than 2% declared self-employed • 1/3 Aboriginal businesses provide employment to one or more full-time Aboriginal employees
Aboriginal Land as an Economic Asset • FN reserve lands cover almost three million hectares • Inuit settled land claims in the Northwest Territories, Nunavut and Northern Quebec which provided monies for investment • Ie.NunavutLand Claims Agreement (1999) gave title to Inuit-owned lands measuring about 350,000 km square • Economic Development: casinos, residential developments, hotel developments, golf courses, industrial parks; airlines, arctic cruises, tour operations • Job creation and training opportunities
Opportunities • As Aboriginal groups gain greater control of capital and resources, opportunities arise for partnership agreements, JV’s with your business • Access to a young, local pool of Aboriginal employees who can be trained to fill growing labour shortages • Long-term business relationships that can lead to additional business opportunities • Sharing information and transferring knowledge • Gain trust within the Aboriginal community you work with and neighbouring communities
Challenges • Community readiness: whether there is sufficient financial and human capacity to engage in a project • Educational attainment: in 2006, 41% of the Aboriginal population had post-secondary certification; only 8% had a university degree; skills training may be required • Financing FN business on-reserve a challenge for lenders • Defects in First Nation property rights (Indian Act) • no ownership of the lands (collectively or individually) • Fed Govt has legislative jurisdiction & mgmt over reserve lands • World economic outlook is still changing
Get to Know the Aboriginal Community • Review the community’s website, read national and Aboriginal newspaper articles, talk to provincial government contacts and businesses to understand local issues and help further your objectives • Who is the Chief and Council: meet face-to-face • When is the next election – usually every two years • Develop a consultation plan or ask the community for their consultation protocols and land use policies
Create Mutually beneficial business relationships • Balance corporate, social and environmental responsibility with prosperity for both Parties • Use agreements to outline understandings that help to build trusting and respectful relationships • Develop policies and protocols (together) that respect good business practice and First Nation values • Establish a regular meeting schedule and create a forum for open and honest communication
Be Open and honest • Engage early, engage often (consultation) – directly involve First Nations at the earliest opportunity • Understand the uniqueness of the First Nation community, and utilize the wisdom of Elders and others with specialized knowledge • Manage expectations and inform the community about opportunities as well as risks of a project • Educate communities about the sector your company works in • Encourage entrepreneurship and partnerships
Resources and links • Assembly of First Nations: www.afn.ca • Metis National Council: http://www.metisnation.ca/ • Metis Nation of Ontario: www.metisnation.org/ • Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami: www.itk.ca/ • Canadian Council for Aboriginal Business: http://www.ccab.com/ • Metis Nation Economic Dvmt Portal: http://metisportals.ca/ecodev/ • Human Resources and Skills Development:http://www.hrsdc.gc.ca/eng/employment/aboriginal_training/index.shtml • Aboriginal Human Resource Council: http://www.aboriginalhr.ca/en/home • National Aboriginal Capital Corporations Assn: http://www.nacca.net/eng-splash.html
Questions? Patricia Stirbys Independent Consultant Toronto ON M5G 0A6 e: pstirbys@yahoo.com c: 647-888-1082