National Post (National Edition)

Walk ‘careful’ line with China, observer cautions

Canada says trade talks are just explorator­y

- ALEXANDER PANETTA The Canadian Press The Canadian Press

WASHINGTON • On the eve of Donald Trump’s inaugurati­on, Robert Zoellick — an eminent figure in American trade policy — offered Canada a pointed warning about China: proceed with caution.

A former president of the World Bank, trade czar to George W. Bush and occasional critic of Trump, Zoellick participat­ed in a panel on Canada-U.S. relations the night before the newly elected president took office.

He flagged a concern about the timing of CanadaChin­a trade talks.

At a moment when China hawks are swooping into Washington, setting up nest in a new U.S. administra­tion and eyeing opportunit­ies to attack alleged commercial abuses, Canada is moving the other way: starting trade negotiatio­ns, discussing an extraditio­n treaty and approving the Chinese takeover of a high-tech firm with military uses.

“Just be careful,” said Zoellick, at a panel hosted by the Wilson Center.

“I suspect there will be some voices in Canada saying, ‘Oh, well, the U.S. is kind of screwing it up with China. We’ll go develop it with China.’ ... I’m not trying to interfere with your sovereign decisions ... But given the personalit­y (of Trump), just be careful about that. If you’re going to do it, make sure you get something good for it.

“Otherwise you’re going to pay a big price with this guy if his No. 1 enemy is China.”

The Canadian government says the talks with China are merely explorator­y.

But the early signs are worrisome, says the opposition — pointing to recent comments from the Chinese government about the substance of the talks, that human rights aren’t up for discussion, nor are limits to takeover bids by state-owned firms. Then there’s the timing. Canada is about to begin trade negotiatio­ns with its indispensa­ble trade partner, the U.S., which buys threequart­ers of this country’s exports. Some of the people on the U.S. side are intensely critical of Chinese trade.

“The Trump administra­tion is populated by a number of experts who have cut their teeth on being aggressive towards China. And the campaign was, in large part, run on a (promise of) very aggressive anti-China trade practices,” said Maryscott Greenwood of the CanadianAm­erican Business Council.

“It’s a very careful line that Canada has to walk here.”

She mentioned three members of the Trump trade team:

Trade nominee Robert Lighthizer: A lawyer for U.S. steel companies, he repeatedly fought the Chinese government over alleged dumping. He’s cast China’s entry into the WTO as an economic tragedy and proposed a half-dozen actions, including aggressive U.S. lawsuits, anti-dumping duties and intellectu­al-property complaints. Lighthizer says the U.S. should even threaten to leave the WTO if those issues remain unresolved.

White House trade adviser Peter Navarro: It’s unclear whether he’ll be involved in NAFTA. But this economist was Trump’s senior trade adviser during the campaign. His most prominent work before entering the White House was a book and documentar­y titled, “Death By China.” In it, he compared the purchase of Chinese exports with the financing of 1930s-style totalitari­an regimes.

Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross: He is expected to play a leading role in NAFTA. He co-wrote Trump’s campaign policy on trade with Navarro. It criticized U.S. open-trade policies, and mentioned Canada only once in passing; Mexico 10 times; and China 33 times. He’s been more nuanced than Navarro.

The opposition says the government should hit the pause button. It says Canada would have more leverage if it waited to negotiate with China as a larger block, with the U.S. or other countries.

“We have to be very sensitive to what’s going on down there (in the U.S.),” said Randy Hoback, the Conservati­ve critic on Canada-U.S. relations. “I would prefer that if we’re doing any trade negotiatio­n with China, we don’t do it alone.”

But a trade expert says this is precisely the right moment.

In fact, says Laura Dawson, Canada’s already late. Dawson, who hosted the pre-inaugurati­on event with Zoellick, says Australian exporters already have a deal and a headstart tapping into the massive Chinese market.

She cites other benefits: that Canada is better off with a rules-based framework with China; that trade within North America is increasing­ly unpredicta­ble, prompting a need to diversify; and finally, she says, Canada could actually be doing the U.S. a favour.

This could be the test run for eventual U.S.-China talks, she said.

“China is worth the effort,” says a paper she recently co-wrote, titled, “Chasing China.”

“Doing nothing ... means falling further behind. Canada must act quickly and decisively to ensure that the China-sized hole in Canada’s trade policy does not create lasting damage from which we cannot recover.”

That being said, she added in an email Tuesday: “Doing a deal with China is still going to be really difficult.” cashed cheques so they can verify that the signatures were not theirs.

Revenue Canada is investigat­ing the matter, Harwerth said. But it wasn’t able to explain why the letter was addressed to his estate.

In an email, the agency said it identifies a taxpayer as deceased when it receives confirmati­on of death from another government department, lawyer, executor, beneficiar­y or family member.

“Despite safeguards to ensure accuracy of our files, occasional­ly informatio­n we receive is incorrect or misinterpr­eted, or human error can occur during the processing of a taxpayer’s informatio­n,” the statement reads.

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