1 / 19

Proposed Canada-EU FTA and Agricultural Trade

Proposed Canada-EU FTA and Agricultural Trade. David Blandford dblandford@psu.edu. Regional Trade Agreements (RTAs): New developments and expectations AES/CEAS Conference School of Economics, University of Kent 24 th June, 2011 . Canada-EU FTA:.

gram
Télécharger la présentation

Proposed Canada-EU FTA and Agricultural Trade

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Proposed Canada-EU FTA and Agricultural Trade David Blandford dblandford@psu.edu Regional Trade Agreements (RTAs): New developments and expectations AES/CEAS Conference School of Economics, University of Kent 24th June, 2011

  2. Canada-EU FTA: • A proposal to conclude a Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement (CETA) between the EU and Canada was announced in June 2009 • Seven rounds of negotiations have been completed since October 2009 • The aim is conclude the negotiations by 2012 • The EU is Canada’s 2nd largest trading partner taking $C49.2 billion of exports and supplying $C55.2 billion of imports in 2010

  3. Canada-EU FTA: • Joint Canada-EU study has suggested a gain of 0.77% in Canada’s GDP and 0.08% in EU GDP from liberalization of trade in goods and services • The study and its conclusions have been controversial in Canada • Canada already has an FTA with the US its largest trading partner: NAFTA, 1994 the successor to CUSTA, 1988

  4. Leading US agricultural export destinations (2010) Source: Foreign Agricultural Trade of the US

  5. Leading US agricultural export destinations (2010) Source: Foreign Agricultural Trade of the US

  6. Leading US sources of agricultural imports (2010) Source: Foreign Agricultural Trade of the US

  7. Leading US sources of agricultural imports (2010) Source: Foreign Agricultural Trade of the US

  8. US agricultural trade with Canada

  9. US agricultural trade with Canada

  10. US agricultural trade with Canada

  11. US agricultural exports to the EU (2010) Source: Foreign Agricultural Trade of the US

  12. US agricultural imports from the EU (2010) Source: Foreign Agricultural Trade of the US

  13. Canada’s total trade with the EU From J. Stanford, “Out of equilibrium: the impact of EU-Canada free trade on the real economy”, October 2010.

  14. Canada’s trade with the EU, 2009 Source: J. Stanford, “Out of equilibrium: the impact of EU-Canada free trade on the real economy”, October 2010.

  15. Structure of Canada-EU trade 2009 EU exports to Canada Canadian exports to EU Source: J. Stanford, “Out of equilibrium: the impact of EU-Canada free trade on the real economy”, October 2010.

  16. Major agricultural products in Canada-EU trade, 2009 EU exports to Canada Canadian exports to EU Source: J. Stanford, “Out of equilibrium: the impact of EU-Canada free trade on the real economy”, October 2010.

  17. Wine policies in Canada • MFN tariff on beer, spirits and most types of wine (made from grapes) is zero • But: • A Federal excise tax of 51.22 cents/litre is applied for wine over 7% alcohol • A 5% goods and services tax (GST) is added on top of the excise duty • Provincial liquor control boards or commissions (13) apply a mark-up to the wine (e.g., 17% in BC) • Provincial liquor sales taxes are applied on top of all this (10-12%) • Total tax can be over 50% • A Canada-EC wine and spirits agreement has existed since 2003– primarily for GIs

  18. Access to Canada’s dairy market • A supply management system has operated since 1970 • NAFTA (and the earlier Canada-US FTA) had very little impact on U.S. market access for dairy products • Canada created TRQs for dairy products as part of the URAA (e.g., the tariff-free access for yogurt of 332 metric tons – the over quota tariff is 237.5%). The TRQ for cheese is 20,411.866 tonnes

  19. Proposed Canada-EU FTA and Agricultural Trade David Blandford dblandford@psu.edu Regional Trade Agreements (RTAs): New developments and expectations AES/CEAS Conference School of Economics, University of Kent 24th June, 2011

More Related