Costa Rica looks to Canada to safeguard rules-based trade, democracy in Latin America
OTTAWA — Canada can protect rules-based international trade and resist pressure from superpowers by working more with the Americas, shoring up supply chains and strengthening economic ties, Costa Rica’s trade minister said on a recent visit to Ottawa.
“We share the same vision of the type of world that we would like to live in,” Manuel Tovar Rivera said in an interview with The Canadian Press. “Canada has enormous opportunities in our hemisphere.”
Costa Rica is on track to become the first Central American state to join the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership, or CPTPP, a trading bloc of 12 countries across the Pacific Rim, North and South America that will soon include the U.K.
Prime Minister Mark Carney has positioned the bloc as a global alliance that can work alongside the European Union against Chinese and American coercion — part of a strategy he outlined in January in a much-publicized speech at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland.


