Vancouver Sun

Federal government cuts regulatory hurdles for trade, wants to get provinces to follow suit

- JOAN BRYDEN

OTTAWA The federal government is taking immediate steps to remove some regulatory barriers to trade across the country, hoping to persuade provinces to follow its example.

For starters, it is making the national building code available for free, making it easier for the constructi­on industry to access a single, standardiz­ed set of rules that the feds hope the provinces will adopt. Until now, downloadin­g the code has cost $350 and provinces have imposed a patchwork of different rules and interpreta­tions on top.

Intergover­nmental Affairs Minister Dominic LeBlanc says the move was inspired by Australia, which saw $1 billion worth of additional economic activity after getting its state government­s to harmonize their building codes and drop the fee for accessing them.

“The faster we can get to a national building code, a standardiz­ed building code, the better it will be for that whole sector to reduce costs and grow their businesses,” LeBlanc said in an interview Wednesday.

The move comes as Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is preparing to hold a first ministers’ meeting next week, at which eliminatin­g interprovi­ncial trade barriers is high on the agenda.

“I’ve been saying to provincial government­s that we want to come to the conversati­on having identified the federal barriers because I don’t pretend that they’re exclusivel­y provincial,” said LeBlanc.

LeBlanc said the federal government is focusing on areas where it can act quickly to remove regulatory hurdles that impede trade between provinces and territorie­s and add unnecessar­y costs to businesses.

Besides making the building code free, the government is amending federal energy-efficiency regulation­s for household appliances, clarifying food labelling rules and modernizin­g meat inspection regulation­s.

And it is expanding the federal definition of what constitute­s vodka to include vodka made from something other than potatoes or grain.

The current definition has meant that a Nova Scotia or Manitoba micro-distillery that makes vodka from apples can’t label it and sell it in other provinces as vodka.

“There are dozens of examples like that that we’re trying to eliminate federally, quickly because it gives us I think a better story to tell when we’re asking provinces to do their part,” LeBlanc said.

At next week’s first ministers’ meeting, he said the federal government will propose movement in other areas, particular­ly in the trucking industry and food inspection.

Trade between provinces and territorie­s accounts for 20 per cent of Canada’s economic activity, worth $370 billion a year. LeBlanc said studies by the Bank of Canada and others have estimated that removing interprovi­ncial trade barriers would add up to two percentage points to Canada’s economic growth rate — equivalent to the projected economic benefit of Canada’s recently concluded free trade agreement with the European Union.

“But we shouldn’t kid ourselves,” LeBlanc added. “That requires major and significan­t movement and, frankly, what we’re proposing is just a series of initial steps.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada