National Post

AS NAFTA TALKS RESUME, CANADA REJOINS TPP DEAL AND TRUDEAU PITCHES GENDER BALANCE TO DAVOS

New TPP deal may deepen NAFTA rift

- Andy Blatchford

• Canada has agreed to a trade deal with the remaining members of the old Trans- Pacific Partnershi­p that excludes the United States and will open distant new markets at a time of uncertaint­y over NAFTA.

The agreement was struck Tuesday after two days of high- level talks in Tokyo — exactly one year after U.S. President Donald Trump withdrew his country from the Pacific Rim treaty. The fresh commitment left Japan as the largest player in a new 11- nation pact that spans two hemisphere­s and includes both U.S. neighbours.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau hailed the revised agreement as t he “right deal” and called it a new step on the path to ensuring the benefits of trade are shared by everyone, not just the rich.

The breakthrou­gh came on the same day that negotiator­s started the sixth and penultimat­e round of talks on the North American Free Trade Agreement, which Donald Trump has repeatedly threatened to abandon.

The new pact involves Canada, Japan, Australia, Singapore, Mexico and six other nations that border the Pacific Ocean. China is not part of the deal, which was originally conceived as a way to counter China’s growing economic power.

But with only a few publicly available details following the announceme­nt, many questions remained unanswered Tuesday. Some criticized the process for largely taking place in secrecy.

Among the open queries was how — or if — the federal government will compensate dairy farmers, who learned their protected sector is to be opened up by 3.25 per cent to foreign competitio­n.

That concession on Canada’s supply- managed dairy sector was the same as the one outlined in the original TPP deal, which was negoti- ated by the previous Conservati­ve government. But it remained unclear Tuesday if Ottawa would offer dairy farmers the same $ 4.3- billion compensati­on package put forward by the Tories.

“It’ s a pretty sombre day for the 220,000 Canadians that depend on dairy for their livelihood,” said Jacques Lefebvre, CEO of the Dairy Farmers of Canada.

Many sectors in Canada, including much of the country’s agricultur­al industry, applauded the deal. But even those who thought the deal would likely be a positive for Canada approached the announceme­nt with some doubts — at least until the fine print comes out.

“Signing another freetrade agreement is not a panacea,” said Canadian Manufactur­ers & Exporters president Dennis Darby, who was optimistic about the agreement.

“The devil will be in the details ... It’s not so much the tariffs, but what are the other elements of this deal? Because it’s the non- tariff barriers that have sometimes proven to be difficult for Canada.”

Internatio­nal Trade Minister François-Philippe Cham- pagne pressed his counterpar­ts for an exemption on culture-related elements that had been part of the original TPP deal. A government official said Canada will protect its cultural sector through legally binding side- letters with each partner.

The autos component risks being more controvers­ial.

In a sector considered key to the deal, Canada managed to get a bilateral arrangemen­t with Japan to resolve non-tariff barriers, including a binding dispute settlement mechanism, according to an official. The official said the side agreement brings into force key commitment­s made by Japan to Canada and the U. S. in the original deal, but which were lost when the U.S. pulled out.

But several auto- industry associatio­ns, as well as a union that represents Canadian auto workers, criticized the deal. The Canadian Vehicle Manufactur­ers’ Associatio­n feared the agreement would give foreign competitor­s an edge over domestic companies.

Unifor auto union head Jerry Dias said that at a time when Canada is facing U. S. demands at NAFTA to increase the North American content of autos from the current 62.5 per cent, the new TPP deal would allow the duty-free import of parts that contained a maximum of 35 per cent of components from member nations.

This would allow t he greater use of cheaper parts from Asian nations, causing havoc in the domestic industry, he added.

“The simple reality is what happened with the TPP completely undermined what’s happening in Montreal over NAFTA,” said Dias.

“They have just cut the legs off of the entire Canadian negotiatin­g team here on NAFTA.”

Trudeau described the agreement as a victory for the Asia- Pacific partners as well as workers in each of the countries.

“The agreement reached in Tokyo today is the right deal,” Trudeau said in a speech at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerlan­d.

“Our government stood up for Canadian interests and this agreement meets our objectives.”

Canada, the second-largest economy among the partners, was widely considered the main holdout in the negotiatio­ns to revive the pact.

 ?? LAURENT GILLIERON / KEYSTONE VIA AP ?? Justin Trudeau addresses the plenary session during the opening of the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerlan­d.
LAURENT GILLIERON / KEYSTONE VIA AP Justin Trudeau addresses the plenary session during the opening of the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerlan­d.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada