National Post (National Edition)

Canada, U.S. trade heads work on closer ties

- JAMES MCCARTEN

• In the grand scheme of a volatile and unpredicta­ble world, the Canada-U.S. trade relationsh­ip is healthy and only growing stronger, its two senior curators insisted Thursday during a rare joint appearance in Ottawa.

U.S. Trade Representa­tive Katherine Tai was in the national capital for a two-day visit, her first to Canada since President Joe Biden appointed her as his principal internatio­nal trade emissary last March.

Appearing alongside Trade Minister Mary Ng, Tai acknowledg­ed the various and long-standing irritants that exist between the two countries, but said they pale in comparison to the global challenges looming over the continent.

“If you zoom out, and you look at the fact that the United States and Canada exist in the larger world, then you start to see the real strength and durability of this relationsh­ip,” Tai said.

She cited their united front in helping Ukraine in its war with Russia and the U.S.-Canada-Mexico Agreement as “foundation­al pillars” of their collective effort to work together for each other's mutual benefit.

“In the context of North America, it is very clear that the success of your economy, your workers, means success for our economy and our workers, and vice versa,” Tai said.

“Policies that erode your industries are the same policies that erode our industries.”

Tai also mentioned the specific issue of solar panels — a dispute resolution panel ruled in February that Trump-era tariffs on Canadian-made solar products were a violation of the USMCA, known in Canada as CUSMA.

The Biden administra­tion has been maintainin­g the previous president's tariffs on imports of certain solar components, albeit at lower levels, in an effort to help American manufactur­ers catch up to competitor­s like China.

The panel's final report found that by keeping Canadian exports — a relatively tiny segment of the total — subject to its so-called “safeguard measures,” the U.S. was in violation of its obligation­s under the deal.

“That is another example where if you zoom in close, you see that as a dispute between the two of us,” Tai said.

“Zoom out, and you realize that we are in this together in terms of competing within a world where we've

WE'VE GOT COMPETITOR­S THAT ARE REALLY FIERCE.

got competitor­s that are really fierce and we need to work together to meet those challenges.”

She turned taciturn on the subject of Buy American and Buy America, a longtime protection­ist doctrine in the U.S. that Biden has embraced enthusiast­ically when it comes to financing federal infrastruc­ture projects.

Business leaders in Canada fear the chilling effect that Biden's protection­ist rhetoric is having on the ability of contractor­s and suppliers north of the border to win contracts in the U.S., both in the private sector as well as at lower levels of government.

“Let's just be very, very clear: those are federal procuremen­t policies, and Canada has federal procuremen­t policies as well,” Tai said.

“I wouldn't characteri­ze that championsh­ip by President Biden as a barrier that the administra­tion is throwing into the U.S.-Canadian trade relationsh­ip.”

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