Saskatoon StarPhoenix

Country’s approach on trade needs ‘reality check’: report

Agreements have ‘troubling pattern of benefiting China more than its partners’

- JESSE SNYDER

OTTAWA Canada needs a “reality check” in its approach to free trade with China, particular­ly amid a dispute over canola exports that points to deeper-lying contradict­ions in Chinese trade policy, a new report warns.

In a report Thursday, the Macdonald-laurier Institute lays out a comprehens­ive argument against Canada seeking a trade deal with China, saying it would be a “non-starter” because of the fundamenta­l disagreeme­nt between the two nations over basic market principles and internatio­nal trade law.

MLI senior fellow Duanjie Chen reviewed a number of free trade deals China has signed in recent years with other nations, including Switzerlan­d, New Zealand and Pakistan, and found a “troubling pattern of benefiting China more than its partners,” according to the report. Chen said China has been “a much shrewder negotiator in getting what it wants from its partners, all of whom have regarded China’s non-market system as harmless.”

The report comes after warnings from intelligen­ce experts that China’s increasing­ly aggressive geopolitic­al positionin­g puts it at odds with Western powers, particular­ly when it comes to signing free trade agreements. It also points to the lopsided trade rules by which China abides, typically by gaining better access abroad for its stateowned enterprise­s (SOES), all while maintainin­g tight restrictio­ns on investment­s in Chinese assets.

The federal government’s plans for a trade agreement have cooled since Canada arrested Huawei Technologi­es Co. Ltd. executive Meng Wanzhou at the request of U.S. authoritie­s, prompting a months-long diplomatic spat with China. China has also detained two Canadian citizens, citing vague national security reasons.

On Tuesday, China further escalated tensions when it barred imports of canola from Canadian firm Viterra Inc., a unit of Switzerlan­d-based Glencor Plc. The move came after a similar ban this month on imports from Richardson Internatio­nal Ltd., a major seller of Canadian grains and oilseeds.

Both bans cited “harmful organisms” found in canola shipments to China; no other Canadian trading partner has made similar claims.

Canada exports roughly 90 per cent of its canola, and sold $2.7 billion worth of the commodity to China in 2018.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has mulled sending a delegation to China in a bid to reverse the canola bans — a plan some critics say fails to recognize the depth of the difference­s between the two nations.

“It will simply be humiliatin­g for Canada, and give the Chinese a pretext to further their pressure on Canada,” said Charles Burton, professor at Brock University and former counsellor at the Canadian embassy to China. “The idea that the prime minister could send a delegation to China and reason with them, that their claims about the purity of our canola shipments are unfounded, is ridiculous.” Burton is also a senior fellow at MLI.

In her report, Chen said a freetrade agreement with China would likely involve reducing barriers for Chinese state-owned enterprise­s (SOES) to acquire assets in Canada.

China is looking to reduce a threshold set by the Harper government that automatica­lly triggers a review of proposed acquisitio­ns by SOES when they go over a certain price. The threshold was introduced after Chinese oil giant CNOOC Ltd. bought Canadian oilsands firm Nexen Energy Inc. in 2012 for $15.1 billion, part of China’s widespread push to buy natural resources assets abroad. That push set off national security concerns in Canada, Australia and elsewhere.

Chinese SOES have long been known to use their clout to further the broader ambitions of the Communist Party of China. The proposed takeover of Canadian constructi­on firm Aecon Group Inc. by a Chinese SOE was struck down last year by Canada, which cited national security concerns.

Chen also reviewed a number of trade pacts China has signed in recent years, and found that they overwhelmi­ngly favour the world’s second-largest economic power.

Switzerlan­d, for example, removed tariffs on 99 per cent of its products on day one of signing a deal with China, while China agreed to drop only part of its import tariffs over a period of five to 15 years.

In all of its free trade deals, China agrees to protection­s on private ownership of assets, which creates lopsided incentives in China’s mostly state-owned land system.

“This fundamenta­l discrepanc­y in land ownership implicitly motivates Chinese investors to grab land abroad but deters their counterpar­ts from doing the same in China,” the report said.

In 2017, Canada’s trade deficit with China reached $44 billion, the highest on record. Raw commoditie­s make up the largest share of exports into China, while equipment and machinery exports are just nine per cent, due in part to protection­s the Chinese government has placed on its manufactur­ing sector.

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