Consumers, Sask. trade to benefit from Trans-Pacific Partnership
Twelve nations, including Canada, announced a tentative agreement Monday on the massive Trans-Pacific Partnership deal.
Speaking shortly after the agreement was announced, Stephen Harper billed it as the largest-ever deal of its kind. However, not everyone is welcoming the agreement with open arms, like SaskMilk, which is wary of the impact the deal will have on dairy farmers in Saskatchewan.
When it comes to Canadian consumers, Sylvain Charlebois – a professor of distribution and food policy at the University of Guelph – says the biggest difference will be the variety and prices of certain products at the grocery store.
“It would be fair to say that consumers are going to have access to more different kinds of products, more variety,” Charlebois explained. “In terms of prices, I actually do expect prices for certain products like milk, some cheeses and perhaps in eggs and chicken, to actually drop for the next two or three years after the deal has been ratified.”