The Standard (St. Catharines)

TOUGH TALK

Tariff threats resurface as USMCA trade agreement officially comes into effect Wednesday

- JAMES MCCARTEN

WASHINGTON — If the longawaite­d debut of Canada’s new trade pact with the United States and Mexico heralds a new dawn in North American relations, Robert Lighthizer sure has a funny way of showing it.

With the U.s.-mexico-canada Agreement coming into effect Wednesday, the U.S. trade ambassador reminded a congressio­nal committee that within the velvet glove of trade diplomacy, U.S. President Donald Trump’s White House wields an iron fist of zero-tolerance enforcemen­t.

And instead of friendly declaratio­ns of trilateral solidarity, the prospect of punitive Section 232 tariffs on Canadian steel and aluminum — an economic headache that tormented negotiator­s during a low point in Canada-u.s. relations — is back and looming large.

“One would think that this would have heralded a new era, but in some respects, this is a situation that just continues to roll on and persist,” said consultant Eric Miller, president of the D.c.-based Rideau Potomac Strategy Group.

In his testimony earlier this month to the Senate Finance Committee, Lighthizer promised to take “the necessary steps” to ensure the agreement’s small-business provisions are honoured. And he threatened legal action in the event of shenanigan­s by Canada’s dairy sector, which is giving up 3.59 per cent of the domestic market and restrictin­g exports on key products like skim milk powder and infant formula.

“There are a number of ways that they could implement their program that would be less helpful to us than others,” he said. “If there’s any shading of the benefits to American farmers, we’re going to bring a case against them.”

Notwithsta­nding the tough talk and the threat of tariffs, the long-term predictabi­lity and stability that will accompany Wednesday’s new managed-trade regime vastly outweighs whatever hiccups and disagreeme­nts will occur in the early going, said Nick Guzman, an internatio­nal trade lawyer with Faegre Drinker in Chicago.

“The administra­tions in all three countries took advantage of the USMCA rewrite to modernize the agreement and incorporat­e some efficienci­es that are going to make trilateral trade a lot more efficient, a lot better,” Guzman said.

Aside from more U.S. dairy products in Canadian grocery stores and slightly higher postage costs for cross-border shipping, the average Canadian likely won’t see dramatic changes right away, he added — although modestly higher prices for cars and trucks are a possibilit­y, given the upheaval likely from the agreement’s new rules of origin and labour provisions.

“You’ll certainly see some big decisions being made by automotive manufactur­ers on where their production facilities are located, the volumes that they’re producing at those facilities and things like that. A lot of the changes to the automotive sector will be pretty significan­t and pretty drastic.”

Canadians who get small-ticket items delivered from the U.S. via Canada Post or the U.S. Postal Service will pay more on items worth more than $20, while couriers will enjoy a new $150 exemption under USMCA — the so-called “de minimis” threshold, said Graham Robins, president and CEO of B.c.based A & A Customs Brokers.

“If you’re an e-commerce store and all your items are $80, it’s a big issue,” Robins said.

Lighthizer is resurrecti­ng the spectre of tariffs because of recent “surges” in steel and aluminum exports, “substantia­lly from Canada,” contrary to the agreement that ended the yearlong stalemate in May 2019.

In a letter to Lighthizer, the Aluminum Associatio­n — a consortium of 16 U.s.-based producers of finished aluminum products — broke ranks Thursday with the American smelter operators who are calling for new penalties, and urged the U.S. trade representa­tive to reconsider.

“The integrated North American aluminum supply chain has been a crucial element of the U.S. aluminum industry’s ability to invest and grow over the past several decades,” they wrote.

“Even at full capacity, U.S. primary aluminum smelters can only meet about one-third of the demand for this vital material. The aluminum industry has no choice but to import a significan­t amount of primary aluminum to meet demand — the only question is from where.”

Experts are divided on whether tariffs are coming, given the political and economic challenges confrontin­g the famously mercurial U.S. president.

 ?? KEVIN DIETSCH TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE FILE PHOTO ?? Robert Lighthizer, U.S. Trade Representa­tive, is threatenin­g to implement tariffs on aluminum imports from Canada because of recent surges in exports.
KEVIN DIETSCH TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE FILE PHOTO Robert Lighthizer, U.S. Trade Representa­tive, is threatenin­g to implement tariffs on aluminum imports from Canada because of recent surges in exports.

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