Tuesday, December 16, 2025
ADVT 
National

Auto Sector Says Harper's $1-billion Pledge Key To Industry's Post-TPP Survival

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 07 Oct, 2015 10:58 AM
  • Auto Sector Says Harper's $1-billion Pledge Key To Industry's Post-TPP Survival
OTTAWA — Conservative Leader Stephen Harper's $1-billion pledge Tuesday for the auto sector is a crucial promise, experts say, because the industry will eventually be exposed to foreign competition after Canada joined a huge Pacific Rim trade pact.
 
Harper announced that a re-elected Conservative government would provide a $1-billion package over a decade by extending the government's Automotive Innovation Fund.
 
The Conservatives agreed to phase out Canada's 6.1 per cent tariff on imported vehicles over five years this week when it signed the Trans-Pacific Partnership with 11 other countries.
 
The move has attracted mixed reviews in Canada — some argue it could help the industry while critics warn it would kill thousands of auto-sector jobs.
 
Auto industry consultant Dennis DesRosiers said the investment proposed Tuesday by the Tories wouldn't be considered huge in the always-costly car business — but it would help keep the Canadian industry afloat.
 
"The name of auto policy everywhere in the world comes down to three words: cut a cheque," DesRosiers said when asked about the Tory pledge, which would support the "bricks and mortar" costs of assembly plants.
 
"This is a game where a billion dollars can be blown out the door on one project. This is $100 million per year.
 
"But without it we're dead — with it we're at least in the game."
 
Flavio Volpe, president of the Automotive Parts Manufacturers' Association, said Harper's election pledge is a significant amount of money that sends a positive signal the Tories are committed to keeping the auto industry in Canada.
 
He noted that the extension of the innovation fund would have the added improvement of providing grants instead of loans, as it did in the past.
 
Volpe also credited NDP Leader Tom Mulcair for promising to help the auto sector, giving the industry the support of major political parties.
 
"We've been looking for that champion for a long time," said Volpe, whose association represents 250 auto-parts companies — a dozen of which make up half of the sector's employment.
 
However, he added that while the TPP offers opportunities for large companies, small and medium outfits worry about increased competition from foreign firms.
 
The autoworkers' union Unifor, which has strongly opposed the TPP, said Harper's big-ticket promise Tuesday essentially acknowledges the freshly signed trade pact will hurt the sector.
 
Unifor has warned the Canadian auto industry could shed as many as 20,000 jobs as a result of the tariff reductions in the trade deal. 
 
"The announcement today is all about politics," Unifor president Jerry Dias said in an interview.
 
"The problem with this fund is that it really is too little, too late. It's a step in the right direction — it's money, it's helpful.
 
"But if you understand the auto industry you'll know that $100 million per year for 10 years really is not very much."

MORE National ARTICLES

B.C. Government, Teachers Work Out A $1-Million Lesson Plan For New Curriculum

B.C. Government, Teachers Work Out A $1-Million Lesson Plan For New Curriculum
VICTORIA — The B.C. government is rolling out a $1-million plan to educate the teachers on the new provincial curriculum.

B.C. Government, Teachers Work Out A $1-Million Lesson Plan For New Curriculum

Conservatives Promise $700-Milllion For Light-Rail Transit In Surrey

Conservatives Promise $700-Milllion For Light-Rail Transit In Surrey
Industry Minister James Moore and candidate Dianne Watts made the announcement Monday morning

Conservatives Promise $700-Milllion For Light-Rail Transit In Surrey

Two Indo-Canadian Doctors Charged With Fraud In Mississauga

Two Indo-Canadian Doctors Charged With Fraud In Mississauga
Dr Mukesh (Mick) Jain, 45, who is a radiologist, and his brother Dr Minto Jain, 48, who is a surgeon, have been slapped with charges of fraud of over $5,000 each.

Two Indo-Canadian Doctors Charged With Fraud In Mississauga

Tug Crew OK After Being Forced To Abandon Ship As B.C. Tug Sinks Off Vancouver

Tug Crew OK After Being Forced To Abandon Ship As B.C. Tug Sinks Off Vancouver
The Rescue Co-ordination Centre confirms the Harken 10 sank off Sandheads, not far north of the Tsawwassen ferry terminal.

Tug Crew OK After Being Forced To Abandon Ship As B.C. Tug Sinks Off Vancouver

Richard Linklater, Barefoot Prisoner Walks Out Of Whitehorse Courthouse After Shedding Guard, Shoes

Richard Linklater, Barefoot Prisoner Walks Out Of Whitehorse Courthouse After Shedding Guard, Shoes
 A warrant has been issued for a Yukon man after he slipped out the front door of the Whitehorse courthouse.

Richard Linklater, Barefoot Prisoner Walks Out Of Whitehorse Courthouse After Shedding Guard, Shoes

Divers Scour Rossland, B.C., Reservoir For Clues In 2014 Homicide

Divers Scour Rossland, B.C., Reservoir For Clues In 2014 Homicide
Cpl. Dave Tyreman says the RCMP Underwater Recovery Team will search the depths of a Rossland reservoir on Monday.

Divers Scour Rossland, B.C., Reservoir For Clues In 2014 Homicide