Removing the roadblocks: How provinces can lead the charge on boosting internal trade
Removing the roadblocks: How provinces can lead the charge on boosting internal trade
Canada at a Crossroads – Volume 3: Dollars and sense: The case for cutting income taxes

The unintended consequence of Trumps tariffs that will affect us all [Video]

Categories
Canadian Economy and Markets

Trump 2.0 is different. He is better organised and has his people in place to deliver his agenda – including all his most destructive impulses. Hence the imposition of tariffs on Canada and Mexico (25 per cent) after a month’s suspension, with an additional levy on China (bringing the total to 20 per cent).

These are paid by importers at ports and the border. The theory is the that levies protect domestic industries. In practice, it’s not so simple. Is it ever?

Let’s take Canada. The duties imposed on its produce don’t just hit its most famous export – the maple syrup represented on the famous flag – they also apply to energy.

Canada supplies roughly 58 per cent of energy-hungry America’s hydrocarbon imports and 60 per cent of its crude oil imports. Canada is a good supplier for the US because it is next door and is (was) a reliable ally. The inevitable result of this …

British Columbia
British Columbia's salmon farmers caught in the net: Ken Coates and Brian Kingzett
No presence, no power. Why Canada must build ties in Washington: Ian Ching in Canadian Affairs