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Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau |
Canada will from Sunday impose
retaliatory tariffs on billions of U.S. goods in response to President
Donald Trump‘s duties on steel and aluminium imports.
Chrystia Freeland, Canada’s foreign minister, said Ottawa
will slap tariffs on $12.6 billion of U.S. exports starting tomorrow. “We will not escalate, and
we will not back down,” Freeland said.
Freeland said she spoke six times this week to U.S. Trade
Representative Robert Lighthizer about how
to resolve the dispute over the impending tariffs that will hit a wide
range of U.S. products. She said she remains confident that “common sense will
prevail.”
Freeland called the U.S. tariffs being imposed for national security
reasons as “not only absurd, it’s
hurtful.”
In March, Trump announced tariffs of 25 percent steel imports
and 10 percent on aluminium over national security concerns. He had exempted
allies such as Canada and the European Union while talks continued with the
leaders of those nations about a permanent waiver.
“Canada has no choice but
to retaliate with a measured, perfectly reciprocal dollar-for-dollar response,”
Freeland said during remarks in Ontario.
But at the end of May, Trump said that Canada and the EU would
be swept into the tariffs, setting off a series of tit-for-tat tariffs
by close U.S. trading partners.
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U. S. President Donald Trump |
“The tariffs introduced by
the United States on Canadian steel and aluminium are protectionist and illegal
under [World Trade Organisation] and [North American Free Trade Agreement]
rules, the very rules that the United States helped to write,” Freeland said.
“It is with regret that we
take these countermeasures, but the U.S. tariffs leave Canada no choice but to
defend our industries, our workers and our communities, and we will remain firm
in doing so,” she said.
Canada, which buys more American steel than any other
country, said that the U.S. has a $2 billion annual trade surplus in iron and
steel products with Canada.
The U.S., Canada and Mexico are expected to restart talks on the
NAFTA after Mexico’s presidential elections, which are set for Sunday.
Canadian steel is used in American tanks, and its aluminium goes
into U.S. planes.
In 2017, about $14 billion of steel was traded between Canada
and the United States.
Combined trade in aluminium between Canada and the U.S. is more
than $11.4 billion a year.
The Canadian government also announced that it would make
available upward of $2 billion in assistance to its steel and aluminium
companies.
That amount includes $50 million over five years to help
companies diversify markets and take advantage of EU and Asia-Pacific trade
deals.
Canada says it has already taken steps to address any dumping of
metals into its market.
Reported by thehill.com
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