The Standard (St. Catharines)

Trade deal with China needs enforceabl­e rules

- — Pitman B. Potter is professor of law at the University of British Columbia and senior fellow at the Asia Pacific Foundation of Canada. PITMAN POTTER SPECIAL TO POSTMEDIA NETWORK

Many Canadians are unsettled about the possibilit­y of a free trade agreement with China.

China’s compliance with existing trade agreements has been problemati­c. Its widely documented practices of subsidizin­g exports or dumping exported goods at prices that do not reflect market costs along with imposing non-tariff barriers on imports violate trade rules agreed to under the World Trade Organizati­on.

On the investment side, while the detention of Canadian investors John Chang and Allison Lu for commercial disputes with politicall­y connected counterpar­ts in China has gotten most of the publicity, other practices, such as imposing technology transfer requiremen­ts on foreign investors, targeting foreign firms (over local ones) in enforcing environmen­tal rules, and denying reciprocal treatment of investment­s in resource projects, banking, telecommun­ications and profession­al services are also cause for serious concern.

Then there’s China’s discouragi­ng human rights record. A government that denies legal rights to its own citizens has a difficult time convincing Canadians it will honour their rights expressed in a free trade agreement.

Nonetheles­s, integratin­g China more thoroughly into a rule-based system such as a free trade agreement is preferable to allowing Beijing to remain outside the law.

While there are concerns about China’s compliance, a rule-based system with consistent and rigorous monitoring and enforcemen­t can begin to provide greater certainty and fairness to trade relations.

Yet the question remains: What might be the terms under which a possible FTA could be pursued?

Foreign Minister Chrystia Freeland recently articulate­d a progressiv­e trade agenda for NAFTA, emphasizin­g gender equality, Indigenous rights, labour rights, environmen­tal protection and dispute resolution. Each of these issues should be applied to China as well, despite (or perhaps because of ) China’s performanc­e.

Within the past year, feminist activists in China advocating gender equality and women’s rights have been harassed and imprisoned. China has been justly criticized for marginaliz­ing indigenous “minority nationalit­ies” and punishing those who seek better treatment. China continues to deny basic labour rights such as independen­t trade unions and collective bargaining. China’s environmen­tal crisis continues unabated due to corruption and lax regulation. China’s judicial and other dispute resolution mechanisms protect the interests of the state and the Communist Party over the rights of appellants.

A Canada-China FTA with clear and enforceabl­e rules on these and other issues can help ensure that trade with China benefits Canadians and honours Canada’s commitment­s to human rights.

China’s public position has generally been to resist calls for reform.

Claims by Chinese officials that they have bigger problems to solve than human rights tend to underscore the conclusion that promoting the economic interests of privileged elites is more important than honouring legal obligation­s to the people of China; indeed, the UN Special Rapporteur suggested as much at the conclusion of his factfindin­g trip to China.

While FTA negotiatio­ns with China present Canada with important opportunit­ies to open markets and diversify our internatio­nal trade posture, essential to this is the insistence on an enforceabl­e rulesbased system that protects the rights of trading companies and citizens in both countries. Protecting legal rights is not trade protection­ism.

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