The Guardian (Charlottetown)

U.S. demands end to Canada’s supply-management in dairy, poultry and eggs

- BY ALEXANDER PANETTA

The United States has lit the fuse on one of Canada’s most politicall­y explosive trade issues, asking in NAFTA talks for an end to the supply management system for dairy, chicken, eggs and turkey within the next decade.

With that demand, the U.S. has now adopted an highly aggressive posture on virtually all the key issues expected to arise in the current NAFTA talks: it wants tall trade barriers in its own politicall­y sensitive sectors, and eliminatin­g similar barriers in those same sectors north of the border.

The latest demands come near the end of a week-long round where American negotiator­s dropped one bombshell demand after another, leading the other countries to question whether the U.S. goal is to actually reach a deal or to blow up NAFTA altogether.

Two sources tell The Canadian Press the request came on Sunday evening, catching some on the Canadian side off-guard, since they hadn’t expected the highly contentiou­s issue to arise during the current round.

One source says the supplymana­gement request came with an initial phase-in period of five per cent more market access per year, leading to total duty-free, quota-free trade in protected supply-managed areas within 10 years.

That adds dairy, poultry, and eggs to a list of irritants that includes auto parts, textiles, trade-enforcemen­t panels, Buy American rules for public works and a proposed five-year terminatio­n clause embedded in the agreement, with the countries holding not just different positions, but sitting on opposite sides of gaping ideologica­l difference­s.

“Outrageous,” said Pierre Lampron, president of the Dairy Farmers of Canada, of the latest proposal.

“It would be the end of supply management .... We are not surprised by the U.S. demands, they are in line with the demands they have made in other sectors.”

The Canadian government, meanwhile, is calling the idea a non-starter.

Canada’s system of protection­s was born from a 1960s effort to stabilize dairy prices, and was later emulated in other industries. It works by limiting imports and setting fixed prices.

The system’s critics say the tightly controlled program stifles innovation, bars Canadian companies from selling onto internatio­nal markets, limits choice at the grocery store and saddles Canadian consumers with higher prices.

Its defenders say it creates stability in rural communitie­s, allows farms to survive without boom-bust cycles and renders government bailouts unnecessar­y. The U.S. maintains numerous support programs to prop up its farmers, they also note.

No major Canadian political party has ever challenged the system.

The federal Liberal government had said entering the talks it did not want to even discuss supply management, having promised to maintain the system. Agricultur­e Minister Lawrence MacAulay said Monday: “I’ve indicated quite clearly that our government is going to fight to make sure (supply management) stays in place. To deal with anything else is simply a non-starter.”

The U.S. has now tabled a series of positions far outside the realm of what Canada says it’s prepared to negotiate, prompting fears that a deal may be slipping out of reach.

Indeed, the prospect of a deal by year’s end already seems impossible. With Mexico and the U.S. embroiled in national elections next year, the countries fear that a failure to get a deal by early next year will push the talks into 2019.

U.S. President Donald Trump, meanwhile, keeps threatenin­g to cancel the existing agreement, to force concession­s from the other countries. Mexico’s finance minister, Jose Antonio Meade, blamed the uncertaint­y Monday for damaging his country’s currency.

Pro-trade U.S. senator John McCain tweeted a Wall Street Journal editorial with the headline, “Trump’s NAFTA threat: Ending the pact would be the worst economic blunder since Nixon,” calling the editorial a “must-read.”

The head of the World Trade Organizati­on warned against increasing uncertaint­y in the global trading system.

The U.S. is being accused of sabotaging the dispute panels at the internatio­nal body, as it’s seeking to gut them within NAFTA.

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MacAulay

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