Canada and U.S. trade has fundamentally changed as a result of the softwood lumber deal reached yesterday. While NAFTA was originally intended to be a free trade deal, as of yesterday it is a managed trade deal. Canada has agreed to restrictions, under certain conditions, on imports of lumber to the U.S. while the U.S. has unrestricted access for their goods into this country as well as unrestricted access to our energy.
Canadian cattle producers have been waiting for the other shoe to drop for months now in anticipation of a rule allowing imports of cows and cow beef into the U.S. It is clear to me that the rule was on hold pending this softwood lumber deal. We can expect a similar “deal” from the Americans regarding trade in cattle and beef. The next rule will allow for “managed” access for cattle and Canadian beef, not free access. At the same time the U.S. will demand free access for their beef and live cattle imports into Canada.
Obviously NAFTA had no political influence within the U.S. The much touted dispute settlement mechanism did not work as Canadians were forced to reach a negotiated settlement after winning NAFTA ruling after NAFTA ruling. NAFTA is dead, dead as a doornail. In its place is a new deal called NAMTA, the North America Managed Trade Agreement.
Canadian cattle producers have been waiting for the other shoe to drop for months now in anticipation of a rule allowing imports of cows and cow beef into the U.S. It is clear to me that the rule was on hold pending this softwood lumber deal. We can expect a similar “deal” from the Americans regarding trade in cattle and beef. The next rule will allow for “managed” access for cattle and Canadian beef, not free access. At the same time the U.S. will demand free access for their beef and live cattle imports into Canada.
Obviously NAFTA had no political influence within the U.S. The much touted dispute settlement mechanism did not work as Canadians were forced to reach a negotiated settlement after winning NAFTA ruling after NAFTA ruling. NAFTA is dead, dead as a doornail. In its place is a new deal called NAMTA, the North America Managed Trade Agreement.
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