New NAFTA beats no NAFTA, gov't says, but no big economic boost coming for Canada - Action News
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New NAFTA beats no NAFTA, gov't says, but no big economic boost coming for Canada

The federal government's much-anticipated economic impact study ofthe revised North American trade agreement does not forecast a significanteconomic boost when the deal takes effect, but officials from Global Affairs Canada told the Commons trade committee Wednesday it's preferable to having no deal.

Global Affairs Canada releases study at last minute, compelled by Conservative committee motion

Chief North American trade negotiator Steve Verheul, left, and Global Affairs Canada's chief economist Marie-France Paquet, right, speak with Judy Sgro, the chair of the Commons standing committee on international trade, before their testimony Wednesday. (Adrian Wyld/The Canadian Press)

The federal government's much-anticipated economic impact study ofthe revised North American trade agreement does not forecast a significanteconomic boost when the deal takes effect, but officials from Global Affairs Canada told the Commons trade committee Wednesday thatit's preferable to having no deal.

Although Justin Trudeau's government has touted the successful renegotiation as a significant win for Canada, most of the effects in the forecast are relatively small.

Implementing the new CanadaU.S.Mexico agreement (CUSMA) would provide a modest boost to Canada's gross domestic product of 0.249 per cent, the analysis found, compared to a hypothetical scenario in which NAFTA, which came into effect in 1993,was dismantled and not replaced.

But will Canada's economy be better or worse off compared to how things stand today, with the original NAFTAstill in place? The department's analysis chose not to disclose much onthat. Otherrecent analysesfrom Canada'sC.D. Howe Institute and the U.S. International Trade Commissionforecasta decline in Canada's GDP.

"The new automotive rules of origin under CUSMA would likely increase auto part production in North America, but could also lead to higher production costs," the Global Affairs analysis said, echoing others who've warned that the new deal makes North American carsless competitive globally.

Global Affairs is forecastinga $1.5-billion decline in motor vehicle exports to the U.S. and an overall decline in Canadian production of 1.7 per cent, compared to current levels. But these losses would be even greater with no NAFTA, it said.

Across all sectors, "CUSMA would secure jobs that would otherwise be lost," the departmentsaid.

The U.S. and Mexico have already completed their ratification processes. The U.S. plans toproceed even if Canada does not come along.

Committeecompletes review

Opposition members areconcerned that the Liberal government has asked them to rush to approve Bill C-4, the agreement's implementation legislation, without fully understanding it.

The trade committee passed a motionlast week callingon the department to disclose its economic analysisand for Marie-France Paquet, Global Affairs's chief economist,to appear.

Another motion passed last week requiredthe committee to wrap up its study of the bill by Feb.28.

The past two weeks have featuredmarathon meetings, with several dozen witnesses testifyingatthe trade committee and three others.

On Thursday morning, the trade committee completed its clause-by-clause review of the bill in about 20 minutes, sending the legislation back to the House of Commons unamended for the report stage and its third (and final) reading when MPs return from their march break.

Efforts to obtain unanimous consent to move the report stage up to Friday were made by first the Conservativesand then the Liberals. Both failed.

Deputy Prime Minister Chrystia Freeland (right) and Government House Leader Pablo Rodriguez announced Wednesday that they'd reached an agreement with the Bloc Qubcois to reassure Quebec's aluminum industry, setting up a potentially unanimous final vote on the legislation to implement CUSMA. (Adrian Wyld/Canadian Press)

The bill could receive unanimous support inits final votes, following an agreement Wednesday between the Bloc Qubcois and Deputy Prime Minister Chrystia Freeland to address the Bloc's concerns about protecting Quebec's aluminum industry from offshore competition.

In anticipation of C-4's passage, aSenatetrade committee has started organizingapre-study of the bill.

Analysis based on Trump threat

Canada's chief negotiator, Steve Verheul, told the committee Wednesday that officials projectgains and losses as part of their negotiation process. Theyanalyzedthe potential losses if the Trump administration pulled out of the 1993 agreement altogether, a threat "we were facing at the time," he said.

Conservative CanadaU.S. relations critic Chris Lewis questionedthe department's decision to base its comparative analysis on this withdrawalscenario, rather than the deal Canada already has.

"Would it be a fair statement to say that the only way ... thatyou could make ... the numbers look good, is to compare it to no deal at all?" Lewis said.

"No it's not," Verheul said."That was the reality of that path, if we had not negotiated."

Committee members asked if it would be possible to run another scenario through the model, comparing the new CUSMA with the status quo of sticking withthe original NAFTA.

Verheulsaid he did not see the sense in doing that.

Comparing new NAFTA to no-NAFTA "sets a stunningly low bar for ascertaining whether the new NAFTA deal is positive for North American trade," Conservative trade critic Randy Hobacksaid in a statement."Almost any trade deal, no matter how unbalanced or restrictive, would be better than having nothing at all."

"For Parliamentarians to understand the impact of the new NAFTA deal on the Canadian economy and Canadian families, we must compare the new deal to the original NAFTA," he said.

It's unclear whether the trade committee will ask for more data from Global Affairs.

Since Justin Trudeau's last face to face conversation with Donald Trump in December, the U.S. president's administration has threatened to pull out of a multilateral agreement on government procurement, undermining the terms of the revised North American trade agreement. (Sean Kilpatrick/The Canadian Press)

While the Trump administration's threat to blow up NAFTAwas taken literally, another more recent threat by the U.S. to pull out of the World Trade Organization's Agreement on Government Procurement wasignored in the Global Affairs analysis.

Canada's negotiating objective to gain more access toAmerican public sector contractswas unsuccessful: CUSMA changes no procurement obligations between the two countries.

Based on that, the department's study assumes Canadian companies can continue to access some types of U.S. government contracts under the terms of the multilateralagreement. But that trade now appears at risk.

Committee given report minutes before testimony

Conservative MP Colin Carrie accused the government of holding back information until after last fall's federal election. He said he was "outraged" that the committee was only given the report minutes before the start of Paquet'stestimony Wednesday morning.

The positive effects of the Trans-Pacific Partnership, the Pacific Rim trade deal negotiated by the previous Conservative government, wereshared much sooner in itsprocess, he said.

"If the information is already there ... I just don't see why it isn't possible to release more information earlier on," said NDP MP Daniel Blaikie, who last week struck an agreement with Deputy Prime Minister Chrystia Freelandfor more transparency in howfuture trade deals are negotiated, in return for his party's support for C-4.

Paquet said the department was already studying CUSMA's potential economic impacts when she joined Global Affairs in 2017, but in recent weeks they "re-did" their analysis, which wasonly finished Tuesday evening.

The committee wastoldFeb.5 that the department had not modelled the new automotive chapter and was trying to figure out an analysis "it could defend credibly" for the deal's qualitative improvements to reduce trade barriers.

Paquetsaid she was unable to analyze the entireagreement, because some parts aren't suited to economic modelling. Because NAFTAalready cut most tariffs to zero, this negotiation focusedon other trade barriers.

Marginal economic effects only

Four parts of the deal were modelled, based ontheir magnitude and feasibility: newtariff rate quotas for supply-managed agricultural products like dairy;revised rules of origin thatdetermine what North American automobiles qualify for tariff-free status;new measuresondata storage for financial services; and changes to the way goods are processed at the borderto facilitate trade.

Dan Ciuriak, the trade analyst who wrote the C.D. Howepaper, saidhis analysis is pretty much in line with the department's, forecasting only marginal effects.

Inu Manak, from the Washington, D.C.-based Cato Institute think tank, said the Canadian government's analysis was far more modest than the optimisticfigurespresented to the U.S. Congress last spring, but still warrants scrutiny.

"If anything, the results are an endorsement of the old NAFTA, plus liberalization achieved through CPTPP [the TPP's successor] and the World Trade Organization, which are making up for the negative impacts of the recent changes," she said.

In her view, CUSMAshould be compared with not only the 1993 NAFTA deal, but also the TPP that the U.S. negotiated, along with Canada and Mexico,and then opted not to ratify. Contrary to CUSMA's new restrictions forthe auto sector, the TPPwould have liberalized automotive rules of origin and set a new standard for the North American market, she said.

Manak's troubled by theassumption in Wednesday's analysis that Canada secured exemptions to U.S. steel and aluminum tariffs in CUSMA when in fact, the U.S. could re-impose thembased on its vague criteria.

"There's nothing to suggest any agreement made with this administration guarantees any specific outcome," she said.