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Trudeau’s Free-Trade Ambitions Will Be Put to the Test in 2019

The Canadian prime minister, heading into an election year, is doubling down on championing free trade.

Trudeau’s Free-Trade Ambitions Will Be Put to the Test in 2019
Justin Trudeau, Canada’s prime minister, arrives at the Musee d’Orsay for a dinner during World War I commemoration ceremonies in Paris, France. (Photographer: Marlene Awaad/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- Trade fights bruised Justin Trudeau’s government all year. The question for 2019 is whether businesses can start to capitalize before anything unravels.

The Canadian prime minister, heading into an election year, is doubling down on championing free trade. His argument is that better, modern trade deals are an antidote to the forces driving protectionism globally -- including Donald Trump, the self-declared “Tariff Man” next door. One pact spurned by the U.S. president, but salvaged by Canada and others, will start to bear fruit this weekend.

Trudeau’s Free-Trade Ambitions Will Be Put to the Test in 2019

The outlook for Canada, however, is murky. The nation still relies on the U.S. for most of its trade, and gains from an agreement with the European Union have been slow to materialize. Hurdles remain for a revised North American trade deal, and American steel and aluminum tariffs still in place. A brewing feud with China after the arrest of a Huawei Technologies Co. executive has also thrown Canada’s fastest growing export market into doubt.

In a year-end interview with Bloomberg this month, Trudeau’s trade minister acknowledged some of the challenges but stuck to Canada’s belief that trade deals will help drive growth, even in the current era. “We’re the only G-7 nation that has a free trade agreement with the other six, and that is a big deal,” Jim Carr said. “We have built the bridges, as trade agreements do, that small and medium sized enterprises can now cross.”

Trudeau’s Free-Trade Ambitions Will Be Put to the Test in 2019

Pacific Pact

Canada struck a deal in January with Japan and others to save the Trans Pacific Partnership, after the U.S. backed out. The revamped pact, known as the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership, created a trading bloc that will see its first round of tariff cuts Sunday. The second round comes days later to start the new year.

Along with Japan, Australia, Mexico, Singapore and New Zealand, Canada was among the first six nations to ratify the 11-country deal, which ensured it will partially kick in and gives them a head-start on reduced tariffs. “It was consequential to be in the top six,” Carr said, while crediting the opposition Conservative Party for cooperating with his Liberal government to speedily ratify the enacting legislation.

Canada also reached an agreement with the U.S. and Mexico to update the North American Free Trade Agreement, and hosted talks to overhaul the World Trade Organization. Still, there may be trouble on the horizon for the Canada-U.S. relationship.

Nafta Negotiations

No subject consumed Trudeau’s government more in 2018 than U.S. trade talks. After more than a year of grueling Nafta negotiations, he and Trump reached an agreement on Sept. 30. Since then, the Conservatives have complained Trudeau failed to get a better deal, criticizing concessions including extensions on pharmaceutical patents. The tentative pact still needs to be ratified, and there are warnings in the U.S. Congress that changes will be needed for passage.

Trump has threatened to give notice of quitting the existing deal to pressure Congress to pass its replacement. Carr downplayed that. “The wise course is to respond to what leaders do, not on the speculation of what they might do,” he said.

The stakes are high. Canada relies on exports for about a quarter of gross domestic product, and it still depends on the U.S. as its top partner, although not as heavily as it once did. The American share of Canada’s total trade has eroded over the past two decades, from a peak of about 80 percent to 70 percent this year, down half a percentage point from when Trudeau took office.

Branching Out

Meanwhile, Canadian trade with China has risen to 7 percent from 1 percent over the last two decades, while trade with the EU has grown to 9 percent of the total, from 7 percent.

The deal with the EU, known as CETA, kicked in provisionally in the fall of 2017, after Trudeau weakened investor protections to calm opposition in Europe. There are, however, signs European exporters beat Canadian counterparts out of the gate.

Canadian goods exports to the EU have averaged C$3.78 billion ($2.77 billion) a month since CETA took effect, an increase of about 2.1 percent compared with the year before. Imports to Canada from Europe have averaged C$5.21 billion monthly since the agreement, up almost 14 percent.

Trudeau’s Free-Trade Ambitions Will Be Put to the Test in 2019

Carr said it’s natural that Canadian exporters might need time to pivot away from the U.S. -- adding that ongoing uncertainty will demonstrate the need to do so.

“People have to adjust to a new way of doing business. That will be true with some of the other agreements as well -- especially when you’re diversifying markets, because trading with the United States for a very long time has been comfortable and has been easy,” the trade minister said. “Now they see that it’s going to be in their interests to experience a little bit of discomfort.”

Risks remain, aside from uncertainty around Nafta and pushes to fully ratify both the EU and Pacific trade deals. The fate of Brexit further clouds Canada’s trade outlook -- the U.K. is Canada’s largest European trading partner. Canada wants to preserve CETA, or some form of it, with the U.K. if it leaves the EU, Carr said.

At the same time, Canada’s arrest of a Huawei’s chief financial officer after a U.S. request sparked a diplomatic standoff with the Asian nation. Carr nonetheless is bullish both that ties with China will endure, and that Canada can draw investment in the current climate.

Countries understand Canada’s contrast with “other nations which are more protectionist, more exclusive and more parochial in their thinking,” he said, declining to name examples. “These free trade agreements make Canada a very attractive place to do business.”

To contact the reporters on this story: Josh Wingrove in Ottawa at jwingrove4@bloomberg.net;Erik Hertzberg in Ottawa at eschmitzhert@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Theophilos Argitis at targitis@bloomberg.net, Chris Fournier, Stephen Wicary

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