Thank you.
I want to take you into another area.
In 2002, Canada has abolished antidumping duties on Chinese imports, imports that are manufactured with less expensive labour. The massive influx of Chinese products significantly harms our industries, particularly the sector that produces affordable, average-grade bicycles. The affordable bicycle sector received a ruling from the Canadian International Trade Tribunal in its favour. The tribunal recommended temporary safeguard measures to help the industry adapt.
First and foremost, I would like to know which criteria were used to consider China as a market economy. We know that the United States and the European Union, among others, do not consider China to be a market economy.
In fact, in all of the recent cases of dumping in Canada, the agency determines that the Chinese government was not fixing domestic prices within the industry concerned. China, was therefore considered as a market economy in each one of these cases. In that particular situation, Canada applied only one single criterion, whereas the European Union and the United States took into account exchange rates, trade barriers, foreign investment, production control, price-fixing control and resource allocation. Why do those countries apply a wide array of criteria whereas we have a single one?