Toronto Star

Intellectu­al property proves Canada’s pragmatism

- JEREMY DE BEER Jeremy de Beer is a senior fellow at the Centre for Internatio­nal Governance Innovation and a professor in the University of Ottawa’s Faculty of Law.

Bad is better than worse. The pragmatic strategy of Canada’s USMCA negotiator­s and advisers stopped the intellectu­al property chapter from becoming a total sellout and salvaged free trade in North America.

Canada achieved everything possible when dealing with an irrational president who doesn’t comprehend the basic way tariffs work. Our attention must now turn to mitigating damages using the domestic flexibilit­ies we retained and realigning ourselves with new partners in other global regions to prevent this from happening again.

While Canada gave up valuable ground on the length of copyright and data protection, such pragmatic concession­s were inevitable. Canada was already prepared in 2013 to accept copyright term extension as the price of admission into the mega-regional negotiatio­ns toward the Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p (TPP).

After the United States pulled out of that deal in 2017, Canada worked with like-minded countries to suspend some of the worst parts of the rebranded “Comprehens­ive and Progressiv­e” CPTPP’s intellectu­al property chapter.

By suspending the U.S.-demanded intellectu­al property provisions in TPP, Canada strategica­lly saved its “trump” cards, knowing we would need them up our sleeve for NAFTA renegotiat­ions. Ultimately, the United States got a little more on intellectu­al property, and less in other areas, than it had on the table before walking away from the TPP.

Also great is the phasing out of investor-state dispute settlement mechanism as applied to Canada, which allowed foreign corporatio­ns to sue the Canadian government for alleged interferen­ce with investment­s. This was one of the ways U.S. pharmaceut­ical giant Eli Lilly tried to bully Canada in its $500million lawsuit complainin­g about our patent law.

Canada has instead moved toward a better, though not perfect, replacemen­t for NAFTA’s investor dispute system in our Comprehens­ive Economic and Trade Agreement (CETA) with the European Union. In this, Canada and the rest of the world are leaving the United States behind.

We should give credit for the clever moves of Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland, her negotiatin­g team, and some highly qualified advisers throughout our government. Canada did not get suckered or steamrolle­d on this intellectu­al property chapter, as we have in the past.

To the contrary, Canada was prepared to accept intellectu­al property obligation­s in the TPP, so similar concession­s in USMCA were not a negotiatin­g failure or pure giveaway. The strategic plan was to exploit the United States’ withdrawal from TPP, and then utilize flexibilit­ies to restore balance at home. With that said, it will take serious effort to mitigate the damages of this chapter.

Canada’s agreement to extend copyright term by 20 years, from 50 to 70 years after an author’s death, gives over 150 years of protection based on current average life expectancy. The cost will be tens of millions of dollars per year flow- ing from Canadian students, book readers, music listeners and movie watchers to mostly American copyright owners.

Parliament can factor this imbalance into the review of copyright law that is now underway. For example, Canada must preserve the flexibilit­ies that protect Canada’s education sector and expand rights of “fair use,” as it’s known in the United States, to support Canadian startups working on artificial intelligen­ce.

While doing damage control at home, we must also work harder to build new intellectu­al property alliances abroad. Canada has in the past cozied up with the United States to support the oneway ratchet of increasing protection for intellectu­al property.

Canada needs to build new trade relationsh­ips with countries that share our strategic interests around intellectu­al property in Asia, Latin America, and Africa, where new mega-regional agreements are now being negotiated.

Globally, Canada can advocate for limits on intellectu­al property, for example through a new treaty on mandatory exceptions for education. And we can realign ourselves with the many countries, not including the United States, that want to better recognize Indigenous peoples’ rights to traditiona­l knowledge.

Canada did well manipulati­ng the United States’ withdrawal from TPP to our advantage in USMCA. Canada must now be confident to offset the USMCA’s harms through counterbal­ancing domestic reforms, and to start reshaping global rules through new partnershi­ps.

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