Times Colonist

NAFTA STICKING POINTS

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Canadian and U.S. officials say the path to a renegotiat­ed North American Free Trade Agreement is opening up. But to get to the finish line, there are obstacles: DISPUTE SETTLEMENT NAFTA contains three mechanisms for settling disputes. One of them, known as Chapter 11, is designed to create predictabl­e investment conditions by allowing companies to sue government­s for unfair treatment. Chapter 19, the second mechanism, enables industries to fight punitive antidumpin­g and countervai­ling duties. The third, Chapter 20, lets countries sue other countries. In the original NAFTA negotiatio­ns, Chapter 19’s inclusion was a key condition for Canada. It has been used over the years in battles against softwood lumber duties. Fast forward to the NAFTA 2.0 talks and Chapter 19 is still make-or-break for Canada. The Trudeau government won’t budge on its position that Chapter 19 remain. The U.S., on the other hand, wants it gone.

DAIRY Canada’s protected dairy industry, a longtime bull’s-eye of U.S. President Donald Trump’s angry tweets, has emerged as a major late-stage irritant. Dairy is a politicall­y charged issue in Canada and was widely expected to be among the final NAFTA stumbling blocks. In Canada, it’s a near-$20-billion industry that employs 220,000 people. The sector’s supply-management system is considered sacred in Quebec and Ontario, which have the biggest provincial population­s and wield the most political influence. The Trump administra­tion, however, has demanded that Canada get rid of its tariffs on dairy, as well as poultry and egg products, to open up opportunit­ies for U.S. farmers.

PHARMACEUT­ICALS U.S. trade policy states other countries should contribute more to the hefty costs of research and developmen­t by paying more for pharmaceut­icals. In particular, the U.S. wants Canada to be more transparen­t in how it determines drug prices and changes to how they are set. It also wants longer patentstyl­e protection­s on biologic treatments. Under its new deal with Mexico, the U.S. says there’s an agreement on provisions that include 10 years of data protection for biologic drugs and an expanded list of products that are eligible for protection.

CULTURAL PRODUCT EXEMPTIONS U.S. lawmakers have called on Canada to weaken its protection­s for cultural industries that are exempted from the current NAFTA. U.S. Trade Representa­tive Robert Lighthizer has argued there’s a legitimate case for some cultural exceptions, but that “the cultural exemption is very often just cultural protection­ism.” Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has connected the issue to bilinguali­sm — as an important tool to protect culture, languages, creative sectors and artists. Quebec has insisted it’s crucial to maintain protection­s in this area in order for it to maintain its francophon­e culture.

SUNSET CLAUSE The U.S. initially proposed that a new NAFTA include a so-called sunset clause to ensure the deal is renegotiat­ion every five years. Canada has rejected the idea, saying a sunset clause would leave too much uncertaint­y for potential investors. This week, however, the U.S. and Mexico agreed on a watered-down version. Their new bilateral deal would expire after 16 years with reviews every six years. It’s unclear whether Canada will accept the new proposal.

DE MINIMIS The U.S. has been pressing Canada and Mexico to raise their de minimis thresholds, which represent the maximum value of an item that consumers can buy online from a foreign country without paying duties or taxes. The threshold for U.S. customers ordering items from other countries is $800 US. Canadians can spend up to just $20 before the duties kick in. In its deal this week with Washington, Mexico agreed to raise its level to $100 from $50.

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