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Lumber dispute strains Canada-US relations
By Keith Jones
7 September 2001
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Canadas business and political elite has responded to
the USs imposition of a 19.3 percent countervailing duty
on imports of Canadian softwood lumber with much tub-thumping
and hand wringing.
Many editorialists and business leaders have urged Ottawa to
link the softwood lumber issue to Canadian energy exports to the
US. (Canada is the largest foreign supplier of US energy.) Yet
when Prime Minister Jean Chretien did just that, he was roundly
criticized by the press. A trade war with the US could only result
in Canadas goring, cautioned a spate of editorials.
The reversal of the prime minister was no less sudden and complete.
Chretien boasted he had telephoned US President George W. Bush
and told him, You want oil and dont want wood? Its
too bad, but if you have free trade, you have free trade.
However, only hours later, Chretien categorically denied tying
the lumber dispute to any another trade or diplomatic issue, declaring,
Its a war when you do that.
If, as expected, the US Commerce Department confirms last months
preliminary ruling, the Canadian economy will suffer a major blow
at a time when it has already been battered by the global economic
slowdown. Softwood lumber is one of Canadas principal exports
to the US. On an annual basis, the value of Canadian softwood
lumber exports to the US has hovered around $10 billion Canadian
since 1996. For British Columbia, where the industry is centered,
softwood lumber exports to the US have traditionally represented
10 to 15 percent of the provinces entire foreign trade.
Industry advocates and BC government spokesmen claim that the
US duty could result in the elimination of more than 20,000 jobs
in that province alone. Several major BC lumber producers have
already announced layoffs and temporary mill closures.
Smaller companies are warning that they dont have the
financial means to meet Washingtons demand that, pending
the Commerce Departments final ruling on whether to impose
the tariff, they post bonds equal to the countervailing duty on
all their US shipments retroactive to last May. In 1994, the US
government was forced, as a result of a series of unfavorable
rulings by bi-national panels established under the Canada-US
Free Trade Agreement, to drop a previous countervailing duty on
Canadian softwood lumber and refund more than $800 million in
export bonds to Canadian producers. But many Canadian producers
claim they will be driven into bankruptcy while awaiting a definitive
judgment by the WTO on the legality of the threatened US countervailing
duty.
Late last month, Washington rejected Ottawas request
that the WTO determination process be expedited.
Adding to the consternation among Canadas business and
political elite is Washingtons announcement that if and
when the countervailing duty comes into full force it will apply
the provisions of the Byrd Amendment. Passed in the final days
of the Clinton administration, the Byrd Amendment stipulates that
any duties collected from foreign producers whom the US has deemed
to be either illegally dumping or subsidizing their US exports
are to be given to their US competitors.
The US Commerce Departments action was long-anticipated.
In March, a five-year agreement that limited Canadian softwood
lumber exports to the US expired.
During the life of that agreement, the Canadian dollar depreciated
sharply against the US, thus placing additional pressure on US
producers.
For two decades, the US industry has charged that Canadian
forest management practices constitute an illegal trade subsidy.
Unlike in the US, the lions share of Canadian softwood lumber
comes from government-owned land. Rather than paying a set price
for their logging rights, producers generally pay stumpage fees
to the provinces that vary according to the producers costs
and the selling price of the lumber at harvest.
The lumber dispute has served to highlight the sharp regional
divisions within the Canadian ruling class. So great are these
divisions that federal Trade Minister Pierre Pettigrew touted
the creation of a common front uniting the federal
and all 10 provincial governments against the US trade action
as a major accomplishment.
Ultimately, this common front may prove short-lived. The Atlantic
provinces sought and were granted by the US Commerce Department
an exemption from the countervailing duty, on the grounds that
their industry uses privately-owned forests. The Quebec government
is also petitioning for an exemption, even while the Montreal-based
Canadian Free Trade Lumber Council urges Ottawa not to enter into
any negotiations with Washington until it has exhausted all attempts
to overturn the duty through the WTO and the NAFTA trade disputes
resolution system.
In other words, Quebec producers are ready to brook no compromise
with Washington, as long as it is the BC industry that bears the
burden of fighting the US trade action. For its part, both the
forest companies and government in BC have indicated that they
want a quick accommodation with the US. BC Forest Minister Mike
de Jong has said BC will soon introduce changes to its stumpage
fee system to make it more market oriented, while
BC industry leaders are pushing for a negotiated settlement with
Washington, even if it means a new agreement limiting Canadian
exports. According to BC Lumber Trade Council co-chair, Jake Kerr,
The WTO is nice, but its a long process, and we might
win it and we might not.... Theres a lot of posturing going
on but out here lumber is everything and were very practical
men.
Among the principal arguments that Canadas business and
political elite advanced in favor of the 1988 Canada-US Free Trade
Agreement was that it would provide a measure of protection from
mounting protectionist sentiment in the US. To its chagrin, Canadian
capital finds that increased economic integration with the US,
while serving as the principal source of domestic economic growth
for the past decade, has also placed it under ever-increasing
economic and political constraints. To try to compensate for its
increasing marginalization and vulnerability at the hands of its
US rivals, Canadian capital is turning ever more viciously against
the working class, demanding that Canada be made the worlds
most competitive country through tax cuts, privatization
and the gutting of all regulatory restraints on business.
Unions rally behind employers
In the Canada-US lumber dispute, the unions on both sides of
the border have rallied behind their respective employers. Excluded
from the outset is any possibility of advancing a program for
forestry workers independent of big business and its political
representatives and based on the common interests of working people
across North America and around the world.
The US-based unions are an integral part of the US Coalition
for Fair Lumber Imports, the lobby group that has pressed the
Bush administration to impose countervailing duties. In the name
of defending Canadian jobs and Canadian industry,
the IWA-Canada (Industrial, Wood and Allied Workers of Canada)
has aligned itself with the employers and Canadas political
right. Since coming to power last June, BCs Liberal provincial
government has slashed taxes for the well-to-do, broken strikes
and introduced legislation to strip education workers of the right
to strike and make it more difficult to organize and easier to
decertify unions.
Yet, the IWA-Canada is urging it members to stand shoulder
to shoulder with the Campbell government and the Chretien Liberal
regime in the Canada-US lumber dispute. Insofar as there is any
opposition to this within the IWA-Canada leadership, it is from
a faction that wants to join with the ultra-right-wing Canadian
Alliance in attacking Ottawa for not taking a tougher line.
Up until 15 years ago, the IWA was an international union that
organized workers across the Canada-US border. But in a split
rooted in the growing trade dispute between Canadian and US-based
lumber producers, the union bureaucracy split the union along
national lines. Jack Munro, the Canadian architect of that split,
became the head of an industry lobby groupthe Forest Allianceon
his retirement from the IWA-Canada presidency in 1991.
Today, unlike in the early 1980s, major lumber producers like
Weyerhauser straddle both sides of the Canada-US border. Thus,
while the workers are divided along national lines, pitted against
each other in a fratricidal struggle over whose jobs should be
cut, and incited by their unions to defend Canadian jobs
or American jobs by boosting corporate profits, the
most powerful forest companies have positioned themselves so that
they can shift production to take advantage of any outcome of
the Canada-US lumber dispute.
See Also:
Canada:
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