Sheila North explains the benefits of letting Indigenous students study close to home
Sheila North explains the benefits of letting Indigenous students study close to home
Trump’s populism has infantilized the presidency: Aurel Braun in the National Interest

An all-in-Canada supply chain? How backward integration could work [Video]

Categories
Canadian National News

As U.S. President Donald Trump’s trade war escalates, federal party leaders are pitching Canadians on plans that could re-imagine the country’s economy and core supply chains.

But can they work?

Trump announced another threatened round of tariffs, this time on automobile imports, earlier in the week, leading Prime Minister Mark Carney to pause his election campaign as Liberal leader to focus on Canada’s response as the April 2 tariff date nears.

Carney called for building Canada’s “economic autonomy” by building a fully-integrated Canadian supply chain.

Speaking to reporters on Thursday, Carney said he planned on “backwards integrating” the Canadian supply chain after stating that Canada’s “old relationship” with the U.S. “is over.”

Carney said Canada’s strategic response plan included “integrating the supply chain here domestically.”

Story continues below advertisement

He said, “I’m using fancy term — backwards integrating into steel, in aluminum to help our steel and aluminum industries that are used, and encourage that backwards integrating further …

Oren Cass: are the things that make the most money inherently good?
Oren Cass: are the things that make the most money inherently good?
Free markets and liberty are not ends unto themselves: Oren Cass and Peter Copeland for Inside Policy Talks