16/02/2017 05:45 AST

The EU and Canada secured clearance on Wednesday for their contentious free-trade deal and the removal of import duties that supporters say will boost growth and jobs on both sides of the Atlantic.

The two parties can claim a success for their open markets policy after months of protest and uncertainty and in the face of US President Donald Trump, who has withdrawn from the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) and wants to rework the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA).

European Parliament lawmakers backed the Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement (CETA) by 408-254, meaning large parts of the EU-Canada deal, notably tariff reduction, will finally enter into force some 8 years after negotiations began.

CETA has been the focus of demonstrations in Europe led by trade unions and protest groups that say it will lead to a race to the bottom in labor and environmental standards and allow multinational corporations to dictate public policy.

The chief point of contention is the deal’s system to protect foreign investors, which critics say can lead to cases such as Philip Morris’ challenge, albeit unsuccessful, of plain tobacco packaging in Australia.

Supporters say the right to regulate is enshrined in the treaty and CETA has replaced closed arbitration panels with transparent and independent courts to settle disputes. Full implementation of CETA, including investment, will only ensue after clearance by more than 36 national and regional parliaments, by no means a certainty. Opposition in the Belgian region of Wallonia threatened to kill the deal last year.

One left-wing group in the Parliament said CETA still faced defeat in national assemblies, referendums or at the European court.

Backers say CETA will increase Canadian-EU trade by 20 percent and boost the EU economy by €12 billion ($12.7 billion) a year and Canada’s by C$12 billion ($9.18 billion). For Canada the deal is important to reduce its reliance on the neighboring US as an export market.

For the EU, it is a first trade pact with a G7 country and a success at a time when the bloc’s credibility has taken a beating from Britain’s vote last June to leave the bloc.

The EU recognizes EU-US trade talks are frozen, but wants CETA to be just one of a series of ambitious trade deals it plans with countries including Vietnam, Japan and Mexico. Canada had signed the 12-nation TPP, which Trump has rejected, but remains in trade talks with fellow signatory Japan as well as with India and Singapore.

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, who met Trump on Monday, is due to address the European Parliament on Thursday.


Arab News

Ticker Price Volume
SABIC 114.77 5,915,941
Index Closing Change
NIKKEI 225 21,292.29 -96.29 (-0.45%)
DAX 12,002.45 -94.28 (-0.77%)
S&P 500 2,614.45 32.57 (1.26%)
Global markets down on trade war worries

05/04/2018

Stock markets recoiled on Wednesday as China retaliated in an escalating trade war with the United States, leaving investors reluctant to take positions in anything but the safest of assets.

The Gulf Today

Egypt to meet investors this week ahead of euro-denominated bond

04/04/2018

Egypt will start meeting bond investors in Europe this week ahead of a potential euro-denominated bond issue, a document from one of the banks appointed to arrange the meetings showed on Tuesday.

Gulf News

Foreign investment in France hit 10-year high last year

04/04/2018

Foreign investment in France rose 16 per cent in 2017 to levels not seen for a decade as President Emmanuel Macron’s (pictured) bid to attract money from abroad gains pace, a government report said o

Oman Daily Observer

Japan's economy a tricky one to understand

03/04/2018

Explaining Japan’s economy to foreign audiences is hard.
One big reason for this is that explaining something as large and complex as a $5 trillion economy is an inherently difficult task - the

The National

China raises import duties on US products

03/04/2018

China raised import duties on a $3 billion list of US meat, apples and other products on Monday in an escalating dispute with Washington over trade and industrial policy.

The government of

The Gulf Today