XPost: can.politics, can.taxes, can.general
XPost: soc.culture.canada, can.atlantic.general
From: sharx35@hotmail.com
"none" wrote in message
news:20140102-191032.973.0@none.shawnews.vc.shawcable.net...
> Sky-high Chinese tariffs block Canadian access to market.
>
> Jan 02, 2014
>
> Canada's trade deficit with China is widening amid a slowing of
> raw
> materials exports to China, while Canadians continue to import
> $50
> billion a year of Chinese products.
>
> According to Industry Canada, the 2012 trade deficit with China
> was
> $31.7 billion in 2012, four times the deficit a decade ago.
>
> Canada-China trade 2012
>
> Chinese exports to Canada
>
> Electrical machinery and equipment
> Boilers, mechanical appliances
> ?Furniture
> Toys and sports equipment
> Iron, steel articles
>
> Canadian exports to China
>
> Ores, slag and ash
> Woodpulp, paper
> Oilseeds, grains, fruit
> Wood, wood articles
> Fats, oils and waxes
> And while China exports manufactured goods, like electrical
> machinery,
> furniture and footwear, to Canada, it imports mainly raw
> materials.
>
> Currently the top Canadian exports to China by value are wood
> pulp, oil
> seeds and grains, ores, mineral fuels and oil.
>
> The Chinese market for Canadian-made manufactured goods is being
> blocked by a high tariff wall, which makes the cost of these
> products
> prohibitive for Chinese consumers.
>
> MO851, a Montreal-based maker of luxury leather goods, has opened
> a
> boutique in Beijing, hoping to cash in on the huge Chinese
> consumer
> market with a taste for luxury goods.
>
> A bag that retails for $465 in Montreal, costs 90 per cent more
> in
> Beijing due to tariffs, taxes and luxury taxes.
Anyone paying more than, say $100, for a purse/bag, should have
their sanity questioned.
I'm all for putting huge import duties on luxury goods. I don't
blame any government for putting high tariffs or
other taxes on luxury/unnecessary items, e.g. the more expensive
the car, recreational boat, etc., the higher should be the RATE of
tax on it.
Bottled water should have a $1 a bottle tax on it, to discourage it
use as 99.9% of Canadians have access to BETTER and SAFER public
water.
>
> Jim Stanford, an economist for the CAW, now part of Unifor, says
> the
> result of high tariffs is a loss of jobs to Canadians.
>
> "It is incredibly frustrating that these policies which are very
> advantageous to China have really curtailed our ability to export
> to
> China," he told CBC News.
>
> Chinese products face no such tariffs as when they are imported
> to
> Canada, despite undercutting many Canadian-made goods.
>
> China's tariffs have been a key irritant in trade with the EU and
> North
> America but are allowed through China's deal with the World Trade
> Organization.
>
> For Canadian manufacturers, they can mean a bewildering welter of
> red
> tape that blocks access to the market.
>
> One of the hopes out for the TransPacific Partnership, a trade
> deal
> currently under negotiation, is that the trading block would be
> powerful enough to force China to reduce its tariffs.
>
--- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
* Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)
|