WASHINGTONâIt was the only specific Canadian trade policy U.S. President Donald Trump talked about. And he talked about it over and over.âYou know, they have tariffs of almost 300 per cent on some of our dairy products, and we canât have that. Weâre not going to stand for that,â Trump said at the White House in August.âThey put tariffs on our dairy products going into Canada, almost 300 per cent. We canât have that. Canât have that,â Trump said at a campaign rally in Indiana in August.âThey cannot continue to charge us 300 per cent tariff on dairy products, and thatâs what theyâre doing,â Trump said at the White House in September.Guess what: Trump made a trade agreement that lets Canada continue to charge 300 per cent on these hefty tariffs.The new United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement includes cuts to only two of Canadaâs dairy-related tariffs, and the U.S. agreed to the same cuts in return: both sides will phase out tariffs on whey and margarine.Canadaâs tariffs of more than 200 per cent on various other dairy items â milk, cream, cheese, butter â will remain the same as they were, a Canadian government official confirmed on Thursday.Trump did succeed in securing dairy concessions from Prime Minister Justin Trudeau. If the new agreement is approved, U.S. farmers will be allowed to sell a bigger quantity of their dairy products in Canada, up to 3.6 per cent of the Canadian dairy market, before those prohibitive tariff rates kick in.That is not nothing. Canadian dairy farmers have been vocal in their displeasure about the increase in U.S. access. Trudeau met with industry representatives in Montreal on Thursday. âIf I was the Americans, I would say, âLook, we have more product thatâs going in at lower tariff rates.â And if I was the Canadians, I would say, âWe protected supply management and kept the tariff rates high.â And i ...
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