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Our strategy for dealing with the Trump tariffs needs to be negotiation: Jack Mintz in the Financial Post

We all want to stick it to the bully but we have to keep working hard toward a deal that can benefit both Canada and the U.S.

January 30, 2025
in Economy and Trade
Reading Time: 3 mins read
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Our strategy for dealing with the Trump tariffs needs to be negotiation: Jack Mintz in the Financial Post

Official White House Photo by Shealah Craighead.

This article originally appeared in the Financial Post. Below is an excerpt from the article.

By Jack Mintz, January 24, 2025

This week I was in Alberta speaking to many people, primarily in business and academia. Although my evidence is anecdotal, there is overwhelming support for Premier Danielle Smith’s approach to the Trump tariff. Our best course is diplomacy, rather than retaliation that will ultimately prove fruitless.

We all share a strong and understandable beating-heart desire to stick it to the bully. We have heard from: our lame-duck prime minister, the Liberal contenders, Pierre Poilievre, Ontario Premier Doug Ford and many others that we should hit back with our own tariffs to change American minds. A (literally) nuclear option designed to maximize pain for everyone would be to hold back energy and critical minerals exports. Whether we do that or not, a tariff war, though not as harmful to the United States as to Canada and other countries, would nevertheless cause layoffs and inflation in the U.S.

The rationale for retaliation involves two assumptions: Because the Trumpians don’t know what they are doing, we need to get their attention and prove Canada is important to them. And we have no real or honourable choice but to retaliate and defend ourselves: trade war is thus our only option.

***TO READ THE FULL ARTICLE, VISIT THE FINANCIAL POST HERE***


Jack Mintz is the President’s Fellow at the University of Calgary’s school of public policy and a distinguished fellow at the Macdonald-Laurier Institute.

Source: Financial Post

This material is distributed by CNAPS on behalf of the Macdonald-Laurier Institute. Additional information is available at the Department of Justice, Washington, DC.

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