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  1. China sees trade as tool of state policy, diplomatic weapon

    In a recent speech in Montreal, Cong Peiwu, China’s ambassador to Canada, noted that while cooperation between Canada and China with COVID-19 was appreciated, it nevertheless was not enough to compensate for the tense relationship between ...

  2. Trump’s Tariff Gambit

    Nothing says “USA” quite like a Ford Mustang—except perhaps a Toyota Camry. ...

  3. Supply management—the Grinch that stole Christmas 

    If Canadians were free to import from the U.S. without paying tariffs, a frozen turkey would cost 15 per cent less. ...

  4. A split Congress may increase uncertainty surrounding Canada’s trade environment

    This week’s midterm elections in the United States were the most expensive (in terms of candidate expenditures) and featured the largest voter turnout for any midterm election in U.S. history, as many observers saw it as a referendum on ...

  5. New trade pact mixed bag for Canadians

    The long-running soap opera that was the NAFTA renegotiations has ended—at least for now. At the last minute before President Trump’s September 30 midnight deadline, Canadian and U.S. negotiators finalized an agreement that expands an ...

  6. Supply management increases prices, reduces range of milk and other dairy products

    When the Australian market was deregulated in 2000, the average price farmers received for raw milk almost doubled. ...

  7. Foisting 19th century trade policy on our modern world is simply wrong

    Anyone trying to understand or explain the Trump administration’s international trade policy is often forced to conclude that his focus on trade deficits and domestic production is really an expression of mercantilism—a trade philosophy ...

  8. Economists almost unanimous—rising trade barriers not good

    Trade with China may actually have increased manufacturing employment in the United States. ...

  9. Trump administration summons ‘national security’ to justify tariffs

    The Trump administration has justified its tariffs on U.S. imports of steel and aluminum from Canada (and several other countries) on grounds of national security. Under U.S. law, specifically Section 232 of the Trade Adjustment Act of ...

  10. In the evolving trade debacle with the U.S, Ottawa must act

    The outlook for ongoing NAFTA negotiations grows dimmer by the day, notwithstanding the conciliatory statement by Mexico’s new president, Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador (known colloquially as AMLO). In a recent interview after exit polling ...