How Canada could thrive without NAFTA

tay

Hall of Fame Member
May 20, 2012
11,548
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For months now, the prospect of the United States pulling out of NAFTA has seemed like a bad dream.

President Donald Trump made the menace much more real this week, warning Prime Minister Justin Trudeau at the White House that the deal may be "terminated" if the U.S. doesn't get what it wants.

This is the nightmare scenario long feared by many Canadians after almost three decades of free trade with our southern neighbour.

Or is it?

Obviously, the end of the North American free-trade agreement – the foundation of Canada's relationship with the U.S. and Mexico – is not this country's preferred option. There would be economic pain and dislocation, at least initially. Untold numbers of jobs would be lost and investments delayed or cancelled if the world no longer perceived Canada as a gateway to the vast U.S. market. Complex supply chains, particularly in the auto sector, would be disrupted.

But it wouldn't have to be an economic catastrophe. If Canada plays its cards right, the death of NAFTA could become a catalyst for making the Canadian economy stronger, more outward-looking and less tethered to an increasingly unreliable partner.

"If NAFTA were to cease, I don't think it would be a complete disaster. And in some respects, it actually has a silver lining," argues David Emerson, a former lumber executive and federal minister of both foreign affairs and trade.

The troubled NAFTA talks are a "wake-up call" for Canada, says Mr. Emerson, who insists he's speaking for himself and not the numerous corporate boards and advisory groups he sits on. Among other things, he says, Canada should use this time to forge closer ties with China, Japan and other Asian nations, ease the regulatory burden at home and invest heavily in the kind of infrastructure that will make trade easier – all to hedge against the risk of an increasingly protectionist and inward-looking U.S.

"If it isn't Trump, it will be somebody else," Mr. Emerson warns. "There is a strong protectionist, self-serving sentiment that runs deep through the American legislative and regulatory process. Ultimately, we're going to have to diversify our economic linkages in ways that ensure our whole economy is not dangerously vulnerable to those protectionist, Make America Great Again actions."

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Hoid

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 15, 2017
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Under NAFTA Canadian agriculture has a $400 million deficit with America.

How could it get any worse?
 

Angstrom

Hall of Fame Member
May 8, 2011
10,659
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Screw NAFTA. Lets go on our own. Our natural resources can net us better revenue.
 

MHz

Time Out
Mar 16, 2007
41,030
43
48
Red Deer AB
Where?? Mexico need more items than we currently make, time to get a wish list from them and let the US do their own laundry.
 

Murphy

Executive Branch Member
Apr 12, 2013
8,181
0
36
Ontario
Hmm, a pipeline east sort of makes sense now.

It does. With the bad blood between both Trudeaus and the Liberal party in the past, perhaps Alberta will deal with Eastern Canada and get some oil moving here. It's win-win.

In time, the cycle will swing back to the US wanting to mend fences, but in the meantime, let's make hay while the sun shines, and recirculate Canadian oil.

PS. Justin, since you like to spend taxpayer's money, you should spend some on building oil refineries. A few in BC and some in Onterrible. That way, we can pump, refine and lessen our dependence on foreign oil. Just a thought. Feel free to claim it as your own idea. We won't mind.
 

Curious Cdn

Hall of Fame Member
Feb 22, 2015
37,070
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I remember the world before the Free Trade Agreement and it wasn't such a bad place (excepting an out-of-control, spendthrift government and incredibly high interest rates ... nought to do with US trade)
 

tay

Hall of Fame Member
May 20, 2012
11,548
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I remember the world before the Free Trade Agreement and it wasn't such a bad place (excepting an out-of-control, spendthrift government and incredibly high interest rates ... nought to do with US trade)
I too recall those days and they were indeed the 'good old days'........


How desperate is Justin Trudeau to keep NAFTA?

Ask the Mexicans, now peering out from under the proverbial bus – where, you know, Trudeau pushed them.
Pretty desperate.

As they welcomed the Canadian Prime Minister to Mexico City on Thursday – and as they gamely extracted the Canadian-made stainless steel that had slipped between their shoulder blades – the Mexicans likely marveled about this once or twice. “¡Tan encantador! ¡Muy guapo! ¡Tan despiadado!” they must have said, to themselves. Rough translation: “So charming! So handsome! So ruthless!”

It wasn’t always thus. As recently as June, Trudeau was welcoming Enrique Pena Nieto to Ottawa, even bestowing one of those Trudeauesque both-hands-and-almost-a-full-hug things on the beaming Mexican president. (It almost went as far as those vaguely-unsettling, nose-to-nose eye couplings Trudeau also favours – but those mano-a-mano moments are apparently saved for swearings-in of new cabinet ministers at Rideau Hall.)

Still, it was pretty cuddly, back in June. Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland had previously ruled out throwing Mexico under the bus. On the record, no less. Said she: “I’ve always been clear, and the Prime Minister has always been clear, about the importance of our relationship with Mexico.” At the time, that unctuous windbag Brian Mulroney even chimed in, solemnly wheezing: “Throwing friends and neighbours and allies under the bus is a position for a weak leader. This is not the Canadian tradition.”

Resulting CBC headline: “Canada isn’t about to ‘throw Mexico under the bus,’ foreign ministers say.”

When he was still getting all grippy with Enrique Pena Nieto in June, Justin Trudeau continued to proclaim the same sort of stuff. “I think it’s important that allies and partners like Mexico and Canada work together to address the challenges we’re facing together,” Trudeau declared, and the Mexicans smiled and nodded a lot.

Well, that was then, and this is now.

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Column: desperate politicians do desperate things | Warren Kinsella
 

taxslave

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Nov 25, 2008
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Just one of the many positives about abandoning NAFTA we would no longer have this constant battle about softwood lumber. They can buy our lumber at the price we ask. Or not. Another would be bulk water. Simply wouldn't be available.
 

Twin_Moose

Hall of Fame Member
Apr 17, 2017
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World order faces major threats: Freeland

OTTAWA - With the winds of a potential China-U.S. trade war gaining strength, Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland says the global trading order that Canada helped create faces its greatest threat since 1945.
"I think that in some ways this is the most fraught moment since the end of the Second World War. And that's a big thing to say," Freeland said during a panel discussion in Winnipeg on Wednesday. Freeland said the global trading order is now facing its most challenging moment since Canada helped establish it after the war, a development that laid the foundation for the peace and prosperity that much of the Western world currently enjoys.
She didn't name the Trump administration, but it is at the epicentre of economic uncertainty that has thrust world markets into downward spiral in recent days.
In the face of that, the U.S. now wants an agreement in principle on the North American Free Trade Agreement in the coming weeks as it swaps escalating punitive tariff measures with China.
Canadians watched record gains in the market evaporate as President Donald Trump tweeted Wednesday that the U.S. lost its trade war with China a long time ago because of the incompetence of his political predecessors.
Freeland will be in Washington on Thursday to meet U.S. trade czar Robert Lighthizer as part of the ongoing efforts to complete a renegotiation of the NAFTA.
Freeland and Lighthizer met last month in Washington and the minister said they made good progress.
"NAFTA is my biggest, most immediate, most constant challenge. It's part of this bigger issue because the rules-based international order is also about rules-based international trade," Freeland explained at a meeting of the Winnipeg Chamber of Commerce.
The broad international implications of the U.S.-China dispute are deeply disturbing, said Paul Evans, a professor of international relations at the School of Public Policy and Global Affairs at the University of British Columbia.
"Global supply and value chains are going to be disrupted, the norms and rules of the global trading system eroded further and a whole new level of uncertainty built into the global economic system," said Evans.
"Add to this the Trump administration framing of China as a strategic competitor and the powder train is being laid for a major confrontation."
Joseph Pickerill, spokesman for International Trade Minister Francois-Philippe Champagne, said the government is closely monitoring the U.S.-China situation.
"We believe, first and foremost, in free trade, in the rules-based institutions and norms that govern it and in protecting the integrity and reputation of our market in the process."
David MacNaughton, Canada's ambassador to the U.S., told The Canadian Press on Wednesday that while Canada's trade focus is on making progress with NAFTA, it is mindful of the impact of the China dispute.
"The U.S. has got issues with China. We've got some issues with China," the envoy said.
MacNaughton said the fact that Trump, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto will all be in Peru next week for the Summit of the Americas could break the NAFTA logjam.
"There is a good chance with the three leaders getting together in Peru, it provides a focus for us to work really hard to try and get as far as we can. I'm not going to predict where this is all going to end up except for the fact we've done our homework."
A well-placed source with first-hand knowledge of Canada's NAFTA stance said the Peru meeting represents the best chance for the three leaders to make progress towards an agreement in principle. The source said centrepiece of any deal will be a resolution on autos.
Kelly Craft, the U.S. ambassador to Canada, said in a speech Wednesday that she has "every confidence" that the three countries can "fix NAFTA so that it can work for the next 25 years."
But she said obstacles remain, including resistance to the American proposal to raise the duty-free limit on Canadians visiting the U.S. for 24 hours.
"The lineup of cars driving back into Canada every weekend that has to stop and declare any purchase when travelling just for the day — think of the carbon footprint of those traffic jams spread across our border," she told an Empire Club of Canada luncheon in Toronto.
"Now, a lot of Canadians might not agree on what the U.S. suggests — $800 a day — but come on — $200?"

I don't see the problem with raising the daily limit
 

White_Unifier

Senate Member
Feb 21, 2017
7,300
2
36
Under NAFTA Canadian agriculture has a $400 million deficit with America.

How could it get any worse?

Canada has harsher winters too.

Make no mistake about it. Just as the UK sacrificed the advantage of low transportation costs in trade between it and the EU, so Canada would sacrifice low-cost transportation in trade between it and the US. Geographical proximity alone makes it such that trade with the rest of the world cannot fully compensate for trade with the US.

That said, I do agree with the OP that we cannot force Trump to act rationally even in the best interests of the US itself let alone other countries. We cannot force the US to trade with us and so absolutely need to promote freer trade with the rest of the world as a fall-back plan.
 

taxslave

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 25, 2008
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I agree.

Canada has to stop being so cheap

Unfortunately this has a negative effect on those of us that do not have quick access to boarder towns. Even in taxes alone we get stung by greedy governments that look for ways to make up for the lost revenue in gas taxes from people crossing over just to buy gas and milk.
 

Twin_Moose

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Apr 17, 2017
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Apparently NAFTA talks are going great without Canada's involvement according to Freeland

Freeland 'very encouraged' by NAFTA progress

OTTAWA - Canada's foreign affairs minister says she's "very encouraged" by signals from Washington that the United States and Mexico are close to figuring out their bilateral issues within the three-country North American Free Trade Agreement.
Chrystia Freeland said Wednesday that she's been in close contact — including this week — with her U.S. and Mexican counterparts throughout their two-way NAFTA talks, which are now in their fifth week. The issue of rules of origin on autos has been central to the summertime U.S.-Mexico discussions, she added.
"We are very encouraged by what we're hearing from our NAFTA partners," Freeland told reporters in Nanaimo, B.C., where she's participating in a retreat with colleagues from the Trudeau government cabinet.
"What we've agreed with the U.S. and Mexico is, once the work on those bilateral issues is done, then Canada is looking forward to joining the negotiation and a swift conclusion of the NAFTA negotiations."
There's optimism that U.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer and Mexican Economy Minister Ildefonso Guajardo could conclude their face-to-face negotiations as early as this week — and open the door for Canada to re-enter the talks.
A report by Politico, based on information from unidentified sources, said the White House is expected to announce a "handshake" deal between the U.S. and Mexico on Thursday. U.S. President Donald Trump is expected to attend the announcement, the report said.
Guajardo told reporters in Washington on Wednesday that he hoped to have a solution in "the next couple of hours, or couple of days." However, on the possibility of a handshake deal, Guajardo said it would have to involve all three countries.

Want more click the link
 

White_Unifier

Senate Member
Feb 21, 2017
7,300
2
36
For months now, the prospect of the United States pulling out of NAFTA has seemed like a bad dream.

President Donald Trump made the menace much more real this week, warning Prime Minister Justin Trudeau at the White House that the deal may be "terminated" if the U.S. doesn't get what it wants.

This is the nightmare scenario long feared by many Canadians after almost three decades of free trade with our southern neighbour.

Or is it?

Obviously, the end of the North American free-trade agreement – the foundation of Canada's relationship with the U.S. and Mexico – is not this country's preferred option. There would be economic pain and dislocation, at least initially. Untold numbers of jobs would be lost and investments delayed or cancelled if the world no longer perceived Canada as a gateway to the vast U.S. market. Complex supply chains, particularly in the auto sector, would be disrupted.

But it wouldn't have to be an economic catastrophe. If Canada plays its cards right, the death of NAFTA could become a catalyst for making the Canadian economy stronger, more outward-looking and less tethered to an increasingly unreliable partner.

"If NAFTA were to cease, I don't think it would be a complete disaster. And in some respects, it actually has a silver lining," argues David Emerson, a former lumber executive and federal minister of both foreign affairs and trade.

The troubled NAFTA talks are a "wake-up call" for Canada, says Mr. Emerson, who insists he's speaking for himself and not the numerous corporate boards and advisory groups he sits on. Among other things, he says, Canada should use this time to forge closer ties with China, Japan and other Asian nations, ease the regulatory burden at home and invest heavily in the kind of infrastructure that will make trade easier – all to hedge against the risk of an increasingly protectionist and inward-looking U.S.

"If it isn't Trump, it will be somebody else," Mr. Emerson warns. "There is a strong protectionist, self-serving sentiment that runs deep through the American legislative and regulatory process. Ultimately, we're going to have to diversify our economic linkages in ways that ensure our whole economy is not dangerously vulnerable to those protectionist, Make America Great Again actions."

more


https://archive.fo/X0ru9

Unilateral global free trade? Bring it on! :)
 

CaptainTrips

Nominee Member
Jul 29, 2018
87
0
6
Screw NAFTA. Lets go on our own. Our natural resources can net us better revenue.

If we can get pipeline to tidewater built.

Just one of the many positives about abandoning NAFTA we would no longer have this constant battle about softwood lumber. They can buy our lumber at the price we ask. Or not. Another would be bulk water. Simply wouldn't be available.

The battle over softwood would remain. They tariff it regardless of NAFTA or WTO and will continue to do so.

There is no problem with bulk water.
 

CaptainTrips

Nominee Member
Jul 29, 2018
87
0
6
It does. With the bad blood between both Trudeaus and the Liberal party in the past, perhaps Alberta will deal with Eastern Canada and get some oil moving here. It's win-win.

In time, the cycle will swing back to the US wanting to mend fences, but in the meantime, let's make hay while the sun shines, and recirculate Canadian oil.

PS. Justin, since you like to spend taxpayer's money, you should spend some on building oil refineries. A few in BC and some in Onterrible. That way, we can pump, refine and lessen our dependence on foreign oil. Just a thought. Feel free to claim it as your own idea. We won't mind.

A few refineries in BC and some more on Ontario?? At 20 to 30 billion apiece you're talkin real money. No way any government is going to do that, nor should they.