Sunday, December 21, 2025
ADVT 
National

Retaliate Or Not? Canada's Tough Decision In The Event Of U.S. Tariffs

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 05 Jul, 2018 12:58 PM
    OTTAWA — Industry leaders say the federal Liberal government will face a complex decision — with deep economic consequences — if the U.S. makes good on its threat to slap tariffs on Canadian-made cars and trucks.
     
     
    Ottawa recently retaliated against U.S. President Donald Trump's levies on Canadian steel and aluminum with reciprocal duties on American imports of the metals, as well as dozens of consumer products.
     
     
    However, if Canada's auto sector does indeed become a Trump target, many fear any Canadian countermeasures would have a far greater impact on jobs and the economy in this country than the fallout from the steel and aluminum tariffs.
     
     
    Canadian Automobile Dealers Association chief economist Michael Hatch is urging the federal government to resist retaliatory tariffs on autos, saying full-scale reprisals would put up to 30,000 jobs at risk in Canada's retail sector.
     
     
    Auto Parts Manufacturer's Association president Flavio Volpe says even though the impact would be devastating to the sector, Ottawa would have no choice but to take precisely the same measures against the U.S.
     
     
    Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland has said repeatedly that the federal government's strategy on tariffs is to neither back down nor escalate the dispute.
     
     
    The U.S. Department of Commerce is investigating the possibility of auto tariffs on national security grounds, and many observers believe Trump could be in a position to make a decision as early as next month.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    DARPAN 10 with BC Premier John Horgan

    DARPAN 10 with BC Premier John Horgan
    We’ve faced some tough decisions on issues that people in this province care about very passionately. As hard as these decisions have been I don’t regret them.

    DARPAN 10 with BC Premier John Horgan

    British Columbia Invites Skilled Indians To Join Thriving Tech Industry

    British Columbia Invites Skilled Indians To Join Thriving Tech Industry
    British Columbia, the Canadian proxvince that is a leader in technology and has one of the fastest growing tech ecosystems in the world, is looking at a shortfall of 30,000 skilled individuals to fill tech-related jobs

    British Columbia Invites Skilled Indians To Join Thriving Tech Industry

    Hundreds of Fort McMurray Insurance Claims Unresolved Two Years After Wildfire

    "This is unprecedented, not just for the people of Wood Buffalo, but for our industry," Bill Adams, with the Insurance Bureau of Canada, said Wednesday.

    Hundreds of Fort McMurray Insurance Claims Unresolved Two Years After Wildfire

    Sex Assault Supports Vary In B.C. Universities A Year After Provincial Bill

    One year after a bill came into effect requiring British Columbia universities to have sexual assault policies, the supports available at different schools still vary widely and students are urging the province to fill a funding gap.

    Sex Assault Supports Vary In B.C. Universities A Year After Provincial Bill

    Kids Still Being Locked Up, Held Down In B.C. Schools: Advocacy Group

    Kids Still Being Locked Up, Held Down In B.C. Schools: Advocacy Group
    VANCOUVER — An advocacy group says children in British Columbia are still being held down and confined in locked rooms, despite calls to change how educators address student behaviour.

    Kids Still Being Locked Up, Held Down In B.C. Schools: Advocacy Group

    Thunderstorms Expected To Add To Flood Woes In South-Central British Columbia

    GRAND FORKS, B.C. — Federal help is on the way for flooded communities in south-central British Columbia as they brace for more high water caused by rapidly melting snowpacks and potentially heavy rain.

    Thunderstorms Expected To Add To Flood Woes In South-Central British Columbia