Trump desires to re-enter the TPP

Bar Sinister

Executive Branch Member
Jan 17, 2010
8,252
19
38
Edmonton
Raise taxes on the net profits of non-renewable-resource-extraction businesses. That will make our raw materials exports less attractive. This in turn would lower the CAD and so increase the export of our value-added products. Just not those products that China's willing to give us for free. We should welcome those.

Somehow I think that hampering an asset that Canada has a lot of doesn't make a lot of economic sense. The one advantage Canada does have is vast amounts of natural resources. It is highly unlikely that we would gain anything by not selling them to people who want them, especially in the agricultural sector. Keep in mind that Asia is full of hungry people with a rising standard of living.
 

Twin_Moose

Hall of Fame Member
Apr 17, 2017
22,041
6,160
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Twin Moose Creek
One of the largest stumbling blocks the U.S. laid out on the agreement was Intellectual property looks like Canada now enters the top 10 IP rights thieves Lol;

U.S. keeps China, puts Canada on IP priority watch list

The Trump administration on Friday labeled 36 countries as inadequately protecting U.S. intellectual property rights, keeping China on a priority watch list and adding Canada over concerns about its border controls and pharmaceutical practices. The U.S. Trade Representative's annual report on global IP concerns is separate from the "Section 301" report on Chinese technology transfer practices that has led the world's two largest economies to threaten each other with tariffs.
The so-called "Special 301 Report on Intellectual Property Rights" calls out China for its "coercive technology transfer practices" and "trade secret theft, rampant online piracy, and counterfeit manufacturing."
It was the 14th straight year that China was placed on the "Priority Watch List."
U.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer is due to travel to China next week along with other senior Trump administration officials for talks on U.S. demands for changes in Beijing's trade and intellectual property policies.
President Donald Trump has threatened up to $150 billion in tariffs on Chinese goods, and China's Ministry of Commerce has threatened to retaliate in equal measure.
A USTR official declined to comment on Lighthizer's specific message to his Chinese counterparts next week, but said U.S. officials "anticipate engaging with them meaningfully on all these issues."
The biggest surprise in Friday's report was the decision to move Canada from the lower-level "Watch List" to the same priority list as China. USTR cited Canada's "poor border enforcement," especially for counterfeit goods shipped through America's northern neighbor, and concerns about intellectual property protections for pharmaceuticals.
U.S. pharmaceutical companies have long complained that generic versions of drugs still under U.S. patent protection flood in from Canada at much cheaper prices.
NAFTA TALKS
The increased criticism of Canada was revealed as Canadian Foreign Minister Chrystia Freeland was locked in intense negotiations with Lighthizer over updating the North American Free Trade Agreement.
Washington has demanded that a modernization of the 1994 pact include stronger IP protections.
Lighthizer, Freeland and Mexican Economy Minister Ildefonso Guajardo are trying to work out a number of stumbling blocks in the NAFTA talks, including auto content rules.
The office of Canadian Innovation Minister Navdeep Bains, who launched an intellectual property strategy on Thursday, did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Ottawa is pledging to create an independent body to oversee patent and trademark issues, "which will ensure that professional and ethical standards are maintained."
Colombia also was added to the Priority Watch List for failing to revise its copyright laws as required under a free trade agreement with the United States.
Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates were added to the Watch List. Concerns about pharmaceutical intellectual property protections, pirated software and counterfeit goods were factors in those decision
 

Twila

Nanah Potato
Mar 26, 2003
14,698
73
48
and now we see just why trump has had so many business go belly up...
 

Danbones

Hall of Fame Member
Sep 23, 2015
24,505
2,198
113
Have trudeau or obama or hillary or may or merkel or satanyahoo ever even owned any businesses?
;)
Have you?

Say, Obama got a peace prize for starting seven wars...I guess trump has it all wrong stopping some?

Right?
 
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