A Look at Canada-US Relations. Fight, Work and Play.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Trans-Pacific Partnership by: Eric Florence. Contents Overview U.S. National Interest, Policy, Politics Issue: TPP Policy Recommendation Conclusion and.
Advertisements

Coping with multiple uncertainties: Latin America in the TPP negotiations Sebastián Herreros Geneva, 24 September 2012.
Page 1 Bureau of Economic, Energy and Business AffairsU.S. Department of State Bureau of Economic, Energy and Business Affairs Promoting Free Trade in.
British Columbia and International Trade Agreement Negotiations October 30, 2013 Janel Quiring, Director International Trade Policy Unit Ministry of International.
A Multimodal Goods Movement Strategy for Ontario Canada-United States Transportation Border Working Group Fall Plenary November 7 – 8, 2012 James Perttula.
Transatlantic Trade & Investment Partnership (TTIP) Presented to the County of Riverside by Marin Dimitrov, Consul General of Bulgaria.
1 Chutima Bunyapraphasara Deputy Director-General Department of Trade Negotiations Free Trade Successes & Thailand Automotive Industry.
Robert E. Scott Director of Trade and Manufacturing Policy Research Economic Policy Institute TRADE, JOBS AND U.S. MANUFACTURING The Effects of U.S. Trade.
The Trans-Pacific Partnership: Opportunities and Challenges Nathan Lane, U.S. Consulate General Ho Chi Minh City Vietnam Oregon Initiative Launch, April.
7. Canada and the United States 7.1. The Canada-US Relationship 7.2. Trade and NAFTA 7.3. Defending North America 7.4. North American Security and Terrorism.
Ch. 16: International Trade CIE3M1-01 M. Nicholson.
Trade, Transportation and Energy: Canada-US relations Colin Robertson NASCO Webinar July 16, 2016.
2014 NACo Annual Conference U.S. T R A D E R E P R E S E N T A T I V E E X E C U T I V E O F F I C E O F T H E P R E S I D E N T 1.
International Trade Agreements BBI2O. Protectionism  When the government imposes policies designed to protect domestic producers by giving them an advantage.
International Trade Agreements BBI2O. Protectionism WWWWhen the government imposes policies designed to protect domestic producers by giving them.
Case Western University, Ohio April 17-19, 2008 The Tipping Point – Effects of Post 9/11 Border Security on Canada / US Competitiveness Gary Hufbauer Peterson.
How can trade contribute to growth and jobs? The role of EU trade policy Signe Ratso Director Directorate General of Trade European Commission.
Asian-Pacific Economic Cooperation By Shelby and LOLA THE DESTROYER.
1 A PATH TOWARDS A MORE SECURE MANUFACTURING AREA IN NORTH AMERICA A deliberate and carefully considered invitation to a win-win proposition Presented.
NAFTA North American Free Trade Agreement Chapters 11 & 15 North American Free Trade Agreement Chapters 11 & 15.
Free Trade Agreements: Helping U.S. Businesses Export.
Introduction to Global Competitive Strategy
BEHIND THE BORDER ACTIONS AND APEC THE CASE OF INDONESIA Presented by Pos Hutabarat, PhD Ministry of Trade Republic of Indonesia.
NAFTA at 20 Years US Mexico Chamber of Commerce November 7, 2013 Animesh Ghoshal DePaul University.
WORLD ECONOMIC ORGANIZATIONS. THE WORLD BANK An international institution who’s responsibility is to provide financial assistance to under-developed countries.
October 11, 2007 From NAFTA to an Integrated North American Steel Market Rafael Rubio NASPD Fall Conference Cancun, Mexico October 11, 2007.
September 28, 2012 Expanding Market Opportunities Through Trade Policy: Office of the U.S. Trade Representative Sushan Demirjian Deputy Assistant U.S.
Trade Programs, Policies, and Outlook 2014 Farm Bill Education Conference Luis A. Ribera Associate Professor and Extension Economist.
ECIPE PRESENTATION » Natalia Macyra Trade Policy Analyst, European Centre for International Political Economy (ECIPE) Implications of the Transatlantic.
Obama and Canada Alexander Moens. Movements in Canadian and U.S. Economic Growth (% ∆ in Real GDP )
Ch. 16: International Trade ECONOMICS 12. International Trade Canadians have become accustomed to consuming goods & services from all parts of the world.
Regional Economic and Political Integration Reasons for Globalization: Air transport industry: FedEx, and Brussels-Based HDL have become the primary movers.
© The McGraw Hill Companies, Inc., 2000 Ch.6: International Environment: Regional Political & Economic Integration.
EPC EDUCATION AND TRAINING – Applications for Membership of the EU Turkey - April 1987 Cyprus - July 1990 Malta - July 1990 Hungary.
TOPIC #7 Canada and International Trade Agreements.
1 Transportation Infrastructure Programs Past, Present & Future Transportation Association of Canada Fall Conference September 2011 Edmonton, Alberta.
Copyright © 2010 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. Chapter 1 An Introduction to International Trade.
International Trade Agreements Economics 11 Stewart.
Are free trade agreements harmful to the U.S economy?
Canada-United States Transportation Border Working Group, October 28, 2010 The Canada-US Trade and Investment Relationship.
Economic Activities in North America
© 2013 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible website, in whole or in part.
Aiia : voice of the digital economy ASR: voice of services in Australia Presented by Kaaren Koomen Director, Australian Services Roundtable Director (Alternate),
BBB4M1-01 International Business Chapter 5: International Agreements, Organizations, and Policies 5.3 International Trade Agreements Countries and companies.
International Trade - Basics. Why trade? All trade is voluntary People trade because they believe that they will be better off by trading Allows for Specialization.
Steel Orbis Economic and Trade Matters Thomas A. Danjczek President Steel Manufacturers Association San Diego, CA July 9, 2010.
Free Trade VS. Protectionism. Tariffs A tariff is a tax on an import. Tariffs cause foreign items to be more expensive as a tax is charged to each item.
February 9, 2016 The Pike Law Firm, P.C..  The Trans-Pacific Partnership (“TPP”) is a trade agreement among 12 Pacific Rim countries  The TPP agreement.
INTERNATIONAL TRADE VOCABULARY Import – a product purchased from another country. Export – a product sold to another country. Global interdependence –
1 Canadian Geography 1202: Globalization. In this unit students are expected to: 1. explain the concept of globalization 2. compare Canada’s position.
Lessons Learned from Other Blocs: The NAFTA Experience Rene F. Ochoa Dirección General de Estudios Agropecuarios y Pesqueros Subsecretaría de Fomento a.
Source: Image Credit: Ramachandra Babu/©Gulf News ( PIVOT OR RICOCHET:
CORPORATE MANAGEMENT in ACTION Session 1. Impact of International Business Environment on Global Organizations CORPORATE MANAGEMENT IN ACTION - CMA 1.
Hsueh-Hong(Constance)Wang Visiting Scholar Sigur Center for Asian Studies Elliott School of International Studies The George Washington University Thursday,
China Trade Lei Jia.
2016 ILS Retreat September 30- October 2, 2016 Boca Raton Resort & Club “Thoughts on the Trans Pacific Partnership, The Election, and the Future of Trade”
GS II India, China, USA, Asia and TPP
Trade Update and Outlook: A View from Washington
Mexico is their 2nd largest export market
Mexican Economic Strategy beyond NAFTA
Transatlantic Trade & Investment Partnership (TTIP) Presented to the County of Riverside by Marin Dimitrov, Consul General of Bulgaria.
C O N V E N E S P R E S E N T S C O O R D I N A T E S
Mexico is their 2nd largest export market
Unit 10: International Marketing
Will membership in TPP really help Japan?
International Trade Agreements
NS3040 Fall Term 2018 USMCA Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago, Strong Dollar Weak Dollar.
NS4540 Winter Term 2019 Pacific Alliance
Chapter 4 The Economic Environment
Presentation transcript:

A Look at Canada-US Relations

Fight, Work and Play

Our Trade: Some Facts Over 8 million U.S. jobs depend on trade and investment with Canada Canada is the top export destination for 35 states Canada is the United States’ largest and most secure supplier of energy: oil, natural gas, electricity and nuclear fuel 400,000 people cross the Canada–U.S. border daily 40% of trade is intra-firm 1/3 of Canadian exports to U.S. contain U.S. 'content’ Source Canadian Embassy in Washington

Canadian Trade with Illinois Over 300,000 jobs in Illinois depend on trade and investment with Canada Canada is your top export market – bigger than Illinois next four destination markets put together CN Rail, BMO Harris Bank run their US operations from Chicago Canadian investment creates 25,000 jobs in Illinois 70% of Canadian crude exports to the USA comes to the midwest market A million Canadians visited Illinois last year spending $300 million Source Canadian Consulate Chicago

Supply Chain Dynamic … We Make Stuff Together

Oil

Observations Allies, Partners and Friends Deep economic integration – more than trade we make stuff together Primary Canadian objective is access for goods, people and services Regulations have replaced tariffs as main trade barrier 9-11 and US security concerns/paranoia and old- fashioned protectionism are ongoing Canadian challenges

Canada and Mexico

Mexico NAFTA (1994) and the Canada- Mexico Partnership (2004), Joint Action Plan (2010) focused on fostering competitive and sustainable economies; protection of citizens of both countries; enhancement of people-to-people contacts and the projection of the partnership regionally and globally. Interparliamentary association, North American Summits 2500 Canadian companies currently operating in Mexico, including giants such as Bombardier, Scotiabank, Magna, Blackberry, Goldcorp and CP 17,000 temporary agricultural workers and 10,000 students

And play Second most important tourist destination for Canadians with some 1.8 million visits per year vs 130,000 from Mexico, low in part because of visa restriction applied in 2009.

Observations Trade, Investment and Tourism continues to grow from Canadian side Mexicans see no natural fit for investment in Canada Canadian Visa restriction hampers Tourism, Trade, Investment Government to Government Institutions need to be revitalized Canada can do much more in technical assistance on policing and judicial training as we have done on election reform

NAFTA worked…

Canadian Trade Partners

US Trade Partners

U.S. Trade with North America, AAGR is Average Annual Growth Rate. Sources: TradeStats Express, U.S. Census Bureau, OECD, WTO, Industry Canada

Trade by Truck and Rail

but it peaked in 2000

US thickens the borders

…,with new security at the crossings

Cost of Delays & Missed Opportunities Annual cost of delays and border security restrictions: $27 billion (2.7% of trade in 2008) Border transfer cost of ‘drayage’ (prohibiting trucks) $616 million in 2008 (or 15% of volume of trade) Cost of building a wall on the southern border: $2.1 billion Annual cost of cabotage (Jones Act): $656 million Sources: Robert A. Pastor, The North American Idea (New York: Oxford University Press, 2011); Alex James Appiah, Applied General Equilibrium Model of North American Integration with Rules of Origin, Doctoral Dissertation for Simon Fraser University, November 1999; Michael Hart, “Trading Up: The Prospect of Greater Regulatory Convergence in North America,” (U.N. Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean, April 2007). Annual Cost of “rules of origin” procedures approx. $35.7 billion Annual cost of divergent regulations totals 2-10 % of production costs

The Public Gives Priority to North America

Public Wants More Cooperation on Transnational Policy Issues

U.S. Support for Common Border Policies

Observations Asymetrical: US is the hub with Canada and Mexico trying to avoid being spokes More dual bilateralism than trilateralism NAFTA has baggage (unfairly) as symbol for outsourcing and job loss Potential is still great: Resources, including Energy, Market, Labour with improving Transportation grids make for increasingly integrated North American supply chains … Trilateralism needs renovation thus Trans Pacific Partnership

Comparing North America with TPP and TTIP: What should be our priority, strategically and tactically? In 2010, the three North American countries accounted for 90% of the gross domestic product of TPP countries excluding Japan, and 82% of U.S. exports to TPP countries go to our two neighbors, Mexico and Canada Trans Pacific Partnership (TPP) includes Australia, Brunei Darsussalam, Canada, Chile, Malaysia,Mexico, New Zealand, Peru, Singapore, Vietnam and the United States.Note: TPP GDP without the U.S. is $2.594 trillion Sources: APEC and North America data from StatsAPEC, GDP and total trade for Western Hemisphere and TPP from World Bank dataBank, US exports data from US Census Foreign Trade division

NAFTA…it still works