Report casts doubt on value of protecting Chapter 19 in Cda-US trade talks
WASHINGTON — The dispute-resolution tool that consumed so much energy during NAFTA talks with the United States has a middling record of defending Canadian exporters, a new think-tank report says — raising questions about what the federal government gave up to preserve it.
Chapter 19, as the 30-year-old mechanism is known, provided Canada a degree of relief in only 12 out of 54 complaints filed against the U.S. since 1994 — the last one 15 years ago, says the report, to be released Tuesday by the left-wing Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives.
And when it comes to Canada’s most significant current irritant — U.S. President Donald Trump’s Section 232 tariffs on steel and aluminum exports — it’s been no help at all, said Scott Sinclair, the report’s author.
“I think Canada got caught up in the symbolism of preserving the Chapter 19 panel reviews, and its record of success for Canadian exporters has been pretty modest, and that’s diminished over time,” Sinclair said in an interview.