The Prince George Citizen

Highlights of the new North American trade deal

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OTTAWA — After more than a year of talks, Canada finalized a revamped free-trade deal with the United States and Mexico. The new deal, dubbed the U.S.Mexico-Canada Agreement, or USMCA, will replace the North American Free Trade Agreement. Here are some key elements of the new deal:

GETTING MILKED:

Trump frequently railed against Canada’s dairy industry throughout the trade talks, calling it unfair to the United States. The new deal grants the U.S. access to 3.6 per cent of the Canadian dairy market, a move roundly criticized by domestic dairy farmers. The access given to the U.S. is slightly more than the 3.25 per cent conceded in the Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p trade deal with Pacific Rim countries.

TARIFFS AND TAUNTS:

Trump joked that the deal wouldn’t have been made without tariffs, specifical­ly on Canadian-made steel and aluminum, which prompted tit-for-tat retaliator­y tariffs from Canada on a number of U.S. goods. And as negotiatio­ns dragged on, Trump threatened to slap Canada’s auto industry with significan­t tariffs – a threat apparently now dodged. The deal says the first 2.6 million Canadian autos exported to the U.S. will be exempted from tariffs, a figure well above the current export rate of 1.8 million. But the steel tariffs remain in place and Trump has given no indication when he might lift them.

ATTENTION SHOPPERS:

The trade deal raises the threshold for duty-free purchases online from American retailers. When the deal takes effect, shoppers won’t pay duties until their online purchase is worth more than $150 – a significan­t bump from the current threshold of $20. But there’s more: language in the agreement no longer requires companies – such as Google or Microsoft, for example – to put a data centre in Canada in order to do business here, meaning Canadians’ informatio­n could be housed south of the border and subject to American laws.

INTELLECTU­AL PROPERTY:

The rules around copyright and intellectu­al property are set to change.

On copyright, the length of time after a creator’s death that they maintain rights will move to 70 years from 50. On pharmaceut­icals, new biologics – drugs made from natural sources – will be copyright protected for 10 years, up from the current eight.

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