Canada Still Faces Risks Despite Signs Of NAFTA Progress

 | Aug 10, 2018 06:10AM ET

Canada’s foreign affairs minister may be upbeat on recent NAFTA trade talks, but there are growing risks that an agreement just between the US and Mexico could leave Canada out in the cold.

Canada's NAFTA difficulties

Chrystia Freeland, Canada's Foreign Affairs Minister, has made it clear that the US and Canada can move quickly to finalise NAFTA trade talks and that her country hasn't been left on the sidelines. Talks between the US and Mexico are said to be close to an agreement on a new auto deal but Canada hasn't been at the negotiating table for the past few weeks. When formal discussions do resume, clearly they won't be easy not least because of Donald Trump's earlier threats to walk away from NAFTA which he's regarded as being unfair to US manufacturers.

Canada still remains on Trump’s hit list for future tariffs

On tariffs, one potential solution being discussed by the Canadian government is duty relief and drawback programmes, where they’ll seek to give some comfort to their powerful automotive industry from retaliatory US steel and aluminium tariffs by protecting them from rising costs. Such protection will be made available to Canadian exporters who can show they’re facing import duties on their supplies. Nonetheless, Canada still remains on Trump’s hit list for future tariff’s, namely on auto imports, which could soon dent the Bank of Canada's optimistic outlook. The positive impact of such duty relief would quickly be diminished should Trump’s threats become reality.

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