Vancouver Sun

FREE TRADE WITH CHINA

PM plans trip to start talks

- JOHN IVISON

OTTAWA • Justin Trudeau is expected to announce he is heading to Beijing early next month to launch free trade talks with China.

The trip has not been finalized but diplomatic sources suggest he will head east in the first week of December.

The Prime Minister has just returned from Asia, where he committed Canada to the “core principles” of the Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p, a trade agreement between 11 countries including Japan, Australia and New Zealand.

But Canada remains reluctant to sign on to a final TPP agreement, specifical­ly over concerns that weaker rules of origin on auto components than those in force under the North American Free Trade Agreement would complicate the ongoing NAFTA renegotiat­ion with the United States and Mexico.

The main prize of a TPP agreement would be preferenti­al access to the Japanese market for Canada’s resource and agri-food industries. But Trudeau is wary of underminin­g the NAFTA talks for limited gains under TPP.

China is a different story. The belief that Canadian exporters need to have preferenti­al access to growing Asian markets like China is considered worth the risk that launching negotiatio­ns may upset the Trump administra­tion.

There is a growing belief in the Trudeau government that Trump’s attempts to blow up NAFTA will end up in a stalemate with Congress, ensuring that the status quo prevails.

If that proves to be the case, launching talks with China would be worth the gamble.

Formal explorator­y talks wrapped up in July and the Chinese are keen to open negotiatio­ns, in line with President Xi Jinping’s promotion of globalizat­ion and open markets.

Trudeau has had warm relations with Xi’s government since coming to power, in some measure because the Trudeau name has carried weight in Beijing since his father opened diplomatic relations with the People’s Republic in 1970.

Opposition parties have been critical of the Liberal government for allowing Chinese companies to acquire potentiall­y sensitive technologi­es, as with the recent takeover of B.C. firm Norsat.

Suspicions about Chinese motives, amid reports of widespread industrial spying, and concerns about lack of reciprocal investment opportunit­ies dissuaded Stephen Harper’s Conservati­ve government from pursuing free trade talks in 2012.

Public opinion remains split on the issue and Conservati­ve leader Andrew Scheer has made clear he opposes opening talks.

Polls suggest Canadians are concerned about China’s military assertiven­ess and the threat to Canadian jobs under a trade deal with lax labour and environmen­tal standards.

Trudeau pushed for his “progressiv­e” trade agenda to be included in the TPP text.

But there will clearly be challenges writing gender, labour and environmen­tal standards into an agreement with communist China.

China has already signed a trade deal with Australia that was 10 years in the making but which sees 95 per cent of Australian exports gain tariff-free access to China.

A study last year by the Canada China Business Council Offered conservati­ve estimates that under a trade deal, exports to China — currently around $20 billion — would grow 50 per cent.

Jobs would be created in the automotive, chemical and seafood industries, with further opportunit­ies in agricultur­e, clean technology, natural resources and aerospace.

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