A dairy-for-lumber deal? Think-tank paper proposes Canada-U.S. swap for NAFTA
WASHINGTON — The most common uses of Canadian dairy normally include milk, cream, yogurt, butter and cheese. But a new report suggests an altogether different application: use it as a bargaining chip.
A free-market think tank suggests offering American negotiators in upcoming NAFTA talks more open trade in dairy, in exchange for more stable trade in softwood lumber to secure long-term peace on that perennially problematic file.
Squeezing some protectionism out of both industries would be good for consumers, spur economic productivity, and ultimately result in more successful businesses in both countries, says the report from the Montreal Economic Institute.
“Trade barriers have never made more than a small minority of people richer, at the expense of the vast majority,” says the paper, released Thursday.


