Times Colonist

Pocketbook patriotism takes off amid trade spat

- ADINA BRESGE

Bonnie Hallman of Winnipeg had been booked to board a Disney cruise next summer to bask in the untamed wilderness of Alaska, which she had longed to see since flipping through copies of the state’s tourism magazine as a teenager — until a simmering trade standoff with the U.S. forced her to rethink her travel plans.

The 53-year-old geography professor said she scrapped her dream Alaskan getaway in favour of a trip to P.E.I. shortly after U.S. President Donald Trump took aim at Prime Minister Justin Trudeau for pushing back against American tariffs on steel and aluminum.

She’s among a number of social media users who have resolved to #BuyCanadia­n in an effort to bolster homegrown industry amid fraying trade relations with the U.S.

A recent poll also found that about half of Canadians surveyed said they would refrain from cross-border shopping or travelling to the U.S. for pleasure.

Hallman said a similar decision came to her like a “lightning bolt” when Trump personally attacked Trudeau as “dishonest” and “weak” upon leaving last week’s G7 summit in Charlevoix, Que.

As a Canadian citizen, Hallman said she has little sway over domestic U.S. affairs, but she could think of one way to hit the Trump administra­tion where it hurt — with her wallet. “I’m not going to let you push my country around,” she said.

But experts caution that pocketbook patriotism may have unintended fiscal consequenc­es on both sides of the border.

Robert Wolfe, a professor emeritus at Queen’s University’s School of Policy Studies, said the online push to #BuyCanadia­n could fan the flames of a trade war in which no side would prevail unscathed.

“If it starts to escalate the Canada-U.S. tensions so that Americans begin to think we’re actually just mad at them, as opposed to mad at their president, that could be difficult for relations, and ultimately, not good for the economy,” said Wolfe.

The mirror of buy Canadian is buy American, a protection­ist approach to trade that Canadian exporters have long fought against for fear of being shut out of U.S. markets, Wolfe said.

Ottawa plans to impose retaliator­y duties on certain U.S. products that appear to have been selected to maximize the political toll on key industries, rather than punishing all American businesses.

“In the end, we don’t win if North American relations become really belligeren­t.”

The online poll conducted by Abacus Data between June 1 to 6 — after Trump’s tariffs announceme­nt but before trade tensions erupted at the G7 summit — also found more than half of 2,200 respondent­s said they would avoid buying U.S. wines, while 35 per cent would be turned off by a madein-America label. The polling industry’s profession­al body says online surveys cannot be assigned a margin of error because they do not randomly sample the population.

Mike von Massow of the University of Guelph thinks a show of Canadian fiscal solidarity might buttress the country’s position in trade negotiatio­ns, even if the #BuyCanadia­n campaign has more of a symbolic impact than an economic cost.

 ?? EVAN VUCCI, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? U.S. President Donald Trump meets Prime Minister Justin Trudeau at the G7 summit in Charlevoix, Que., on June 8.
EVAN VUCCI, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS U.S. President Donald Trump meets Prime Minister Justin Trudeau at the G7 summit in Charlevoix, Que., on June 8.

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