National Post (National Edition)

HOW BIDEN PROCUREMEN­T ORDER COULD HURT CANADA

- JAMES MCCARTEN

WASHINGTON • President Joe Biden imposed stringent new made-in-America rules for U.S. government spending Monday.

They come with a caveat likely troubling to Canada: exceptions to those rules will be allowed only under “very limited circumstan­ces.”

Monday’s Buy American executive order was the result of a cornerston­e Biden campaign promise.

It was designed to corral swingstate support among the protection­ist, blue-collar voters who previously elevated Donald Trump to the White House.

The policy is to ensure that American manufactur­ers, workers and suppliers are the primary beneficiar­ies of U.S. government largesse, including an estimated $600 billion a year in procuremen­t contracts.

Biden says the Trump administra­tion liked to talk about Buy American, but ultimately did little to toughen or even enforce the rules.

“That is going to change on our watch,” he said, signing an executive order to enact a series of measures to raise standards for U.S. content, increase oversight and provide for more stringent enforcemen­t.

They include a “Made in America” office attached to the White House Office of Management and Budget to oversee waivers — the exceptions that allow Canadian contractor­s, manufactur­ers and suppliers access to a lucrative and often essential source of business.

“I’m directing the Office of Management and Budget to review waivers to make sure they are only used in very limited circumstan­ces — for example, when there’s an overwhelmi­ng national security, humanitari­an or emergency need here in America,” Biden said.

“This hasn't happened before. It will happen now.”

Waiver details will also be posted on a U.S. government website to provide more public transparen­cy about who is getting around the rules, and why.

The plan would also increase the amount of U.S.-produced materials or components a project or product would need in order to qualify as American-made, and make it easier for small and medium-sized businesses to access procuremen­t opportunit­ies.

It requires government agencies to provide twice-yearly progress reports on their efforts to follow the new rules.

It also voices support for the Jones Act, a law that requires goods being shipped between domestic ports to be delivered on U.S.-flagged vessels that are built, owned and operated by American citizens or permanent residents.

“I don't buy for one second that the vitality of American manufactur­ing is a thing of the past,” Biden said. “American manufactur­ing was the arsenal of democracy in World War Two, and it must be part of the engine of American prosperity now.”

Mark Agnew, the director of internatio­nal policy for the Canadian Chamber of Commerce, said Canada will find little of comfort in Monday's news.

“Buy American restrictio­ns remain a perennial problem for Canadian businesses seeking to access government contracts with our largest trading partner,” Agnew said in a statement.

“Although the rules have progressiv­ely tightened over the years, (Monday's) announceme­nt represents another unhelpful step to make it more difficult for Canadian businesses to secure contracts in the U.S.”

In the midst of a deadly pandemic and resultant economic free-fall, Canada and the U.S. should be looking for ways to join forces and leverage their strengths to fortify existing cross-border supply chains, Agnew said.

“Although the full impact of (Monday's) announceme­nt will take time to cascade to different parts of the U.S. government, its chilling effect on business will be acutely felt north of the border.”

At the same time, a more stringent and orderly system of approving and enforcing waivers might eventually prove to be a “silver lining” for Canada, said Dan Ujczo, a Canada-U.S. trade lawyer based in Columbus, Ohio.

The enforcemen­t of procuremen­t rules can sometimes be haphazard, particular­ly when they are confusing and poorly understood, said Ujczo, senior counsel with the U.S. firm Thompson Hine LLP.

“Canada has a network of agreements with the U.S. to address Buy American programs, but the nuance often is lost on procuremen­t officers that do not want to risk using non-U.S. products,” he said. “If Canadian companies can use this new Made in America office at OMB to emphasize Canada's `exemptiona­lism,' it could prove worthwhile.”

The U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement does not include specific government procuremen­t provisions between the U.S. and Canada.

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 ?? DREW ANGERER / GETTY IMAGES ?? U.S. President Joe Biden signs an executive order related to American manufactur­ing and Buy American in the
White House complex on Monday.
DREW ANGERER / GETTY IMAGES U.S. President Joe Biden signs an executive order related to American manufactur­ing and Buy American in the White House complex on Monday.

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