Thursday, March 14, 2019

Essay --

The Softwood Lumber Dis shake offe In August 1987, subsequently fifteen months of negotiations Canada and the U.S concluded another round of talks, and finally agreed on a free trade agreement. It was then Prime Minister Brian Mulroney and president Ronald Reagan who had launched the trade initiative at their convivial 1985 and their main focus was glowering trade and tariff barriers. This was cast as a path to change magnitude prosperity for two nations. This is also known as the Ottawa summit. nonetheless the negotiating was not easy. Substantive differences did not prove amenable to quick resolution. The Canadian Prime Minister was however in for a disappointment as he had placed a considerable amount of stakes on this deal and hated to see it finished shoot. The Canadian negotiators were in for a difficult deal that was how to move the bargain forward without losing their side off the deal. By September, the Canadian government was preparing a strategy for resolving the talks-one stylus or another. Failing that, the Canadian cabinet would have to determine how and when to allow the breakdown in the negotiations. This case is designed to encourage discussion of both the Canadian and US negotiating postures and of how each nations assessment of the other helped to define its negotiating stance. another(prenominal) case, US-Canada Free Trade Negotiations I (C16-87-785.0), involves US preparations for the negotiations, with specific focus on obtaining congressional approval for the talks (http//www.ksgcase.harvard.edu/case.htm?PID=862) Canadian officials had given sort of a palpable response to the imposition of duty, which was around 19.3 percent, countervailing tax on imports of Canadian peck lumber with much tub-thumping and hand wringing. Many traders a... ...an work world at odds with the free trade agreement that was drafted in 1987, with the aim of encouraging better trading through pulling bum the different trade barriers that are used i n international trade. The softwood lumber dispute is however straining traffic between Canada and the Unites states. It has put the 1987 agreement into the background and dashed any hopes of better trading relations between the two countries. Canada is a major supplier of softwood and the joined state is a major market, which it is at risk of losing. Therefore the movement of Canadian objectives remains elusive at best. Bibliography US-Canada Free Trade Negotiations (II) The Canadian Dilemma, http//www.ksgcase.harvard.edu/case.htm?PID=862 Keith Jones, (7 September 2001) Lumber dispute strains Canada-US relations, http//www.wsws.org/articles/2001/sep2001/lumb-s07.shtml

No comments:

Post a Comment