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International Trade committee  Thank you very much, Madam Chair and members, for the invitation to speak here at committee today. Although it's quite common for stakeholders to reference the critical or timely nature of a given study, I think this one really is. International trade is critical to Canada, and

July 9th, 2020Committee meeting

Mark Agnew

International Trade committee  Yes, I am very much aligned with what Mathew has said. There's a lot under our direct control that we can do to have it make fiscal and financial sense for companies. At the end of the day, a company can't be running at a loss permanently. For example, how can we have capital co

July 9th, 2020Committee meeting

Mark Agnew

International Trade committee  The first thing I would say is that the statements we've been producing have been a fantastic initial effort. What we're saying very much is to build on that and take them to the next level. Those statements, at the end of the day, are not legally binding on the countries that ma

July 9th, 2020Committee meeting

Mark Agnew

International Trade committee  Maybe I'll just start it off. We haven't done a quantitative analysis of the impacts. It's being said that we have quantitative numbers. It's what the Canada Border Services Agency is already producing domestically. However, in terms of the actual impact, it's quite varied in ter

July 9th, 2020Committee meeting

Mark Agnew

International Trade committee  I'll maybe kick it off before handing it over to Matt. Certainly the World Trade Organization has done quite a lot of interesting work through its leading indicators on what they're seeing around the world in transportation and logistics, so absolutely there will be a decrease.

July 9th, 2020Committee meeting

Mark Agnew

International Trade committee  I agree with what Mathew said on the SMEs. To build on that, I would say use the regulatory co-operation mechanisms. It's great if tariffs come down, but if the regulatory measures aren't aligned or they keep out a company, then tariff liberalization is a moot point. We saw that

July 9th, 2020Committee meeting

Mark Agnew

International Trade committee  We're just starting our work to dig into this now in more detail. I mean, the headline message is that the current rules are best described as FTZ-like policies. I think when a company comes in and they talk about FTZs, they're having an expectation of much more flexibility with

July 9th, 2020Committee meeting

Mark Agnew

International Trade committee  It is precisely those types of things—ports and airports. This isn't anything new, and I'm not trying to pretend it is. As always, the reality for these infrastructure funds is that the demand way outstrips the supply of money available. This is about putting more cash into the n

July 9th, 2020Committee meeting

Mark Agnew

International Trade committee  We're definitely talking about substantive value-added transformation. Precisely what you talked about is some of the problems we would have with the regime as it stands today, and loosening those rules to enable more production would build up our domestic capacity in the manufac

July 9th, 2020Committee meeting

Mark Agnew

International Trade committee  Thank you, Madam Chair and honourable members, for the invitation to speak as part of the committee's U.K. study. It's a pleasure to be back here and to see you all again virtually. As the committee's members will appreciate, the U.K. is a significant trading partner for Canada.

November 16th, 2020Committee meeting

Mark Agnew

International Trade committee  What prompted us to write the letter was simply that December 31 is rapidly approaching. We have a domestic legislative process that needs to follow the conclusion of any deal, and time is running short now. It was running short then when we wrote the letter. Certainly, if you're

November 16th, 2020Committee meeting

Mark Agnew

International Trade committee  In juxtaposition to what you might see under, say, Canada's negotiation with ASEAN where there was a formal Gazette notice, to my knowledge there has not been any formal Gazette notice for the U.K. process. I will say that both the minister's office and the departmental officials

November 16th, 2020Committee meeting

Mark Agnew

International Trade committee  I think that any time you're in a negotiation, there's going to be a lot of heated rhetoric. I still remember what someone said to me about CETA, about how when you get to the end, there's drama both real and manufactured. Whether this is real or manufactured, that's not for me t

November 16th, 2020Committee meeting

Mark Agnew

International Trade committee  As I understand it, the non-tariff barriers have been discussed so far at an EU level, given that the U.K. hasn't fully divorced itself from the EU rule book. It will, as I understand it, copy over the EU rule book on January 1. What we're hoping to see is that we'll be able to p

November 16th, 2020Committee meeting

Mark Agnew

International Trade committee  As a multisectoral association, I appreciate my members' concerns equally across all industries, so I wouldn't want to start singling out particular ones. I think the ones that I had noted in my remarks around lobster, vehicles, beef, plastics.... Those are the ones that have cer

November 16th, 2020Committee meeting

Mark Agnew