In a speech last week, Prime Minister Mark Carney repeated a line he had used to great effect earlier this year: “This decades-long process of an ever-closer economic relationship with the United States is now over.”
As a consequence, he went on to say, “Our goal for Canada is to double our non-U.S. exports over the course of the next decade,” from roughly $300 billion today.
And as if to reinforce the point, President Trump (though seemingly in response to an innocuous TV ad by Ontario) ended all trade negotiations with Canada the next day and increased the tariff on some of our exports by 10 percent.
There has been no shortage of analysts unpacking whether doubling non-U.S. exports might be possible.
Unlike much of what has already been written, though, I tend to think the goal is easy.
Yes, easy. But in terms of boosting Canada’s economy, it won’t do much ...
CLICK HERE for the full story
As a consequence, he went on to say, “Our goal for Canada is to double our non-U.S. exports over the course of the next decade,” from roughly $300 billion today.
And as if to reinforce the point, President Trump (though seemingly in response to an innocuous TV ad by Ontario) ended all trade negotiations with Canada the next day and increased the tariff on some of our exports by 10 percent.
There has been no shortage of analysts unpacking whether doubling non-U.S. exports might be possible.
Unlike much of what has already been written, though, I tend to think the goal is easy.
Yes, easy. But in terms of boosting Canada’s economy, it won’t do much ...
CLICK HERE for the full story

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