(Embassy – Leslie Campbell)
After enduring years of border thickening and complaining with little result, the “Buy American” provision in President Obama’s stimulus bill may have gone one step too far, awakening Canada from its torpor and simultaneously uniting the federal, provincial and municipal governments around one problem – something few other issues can do.
As is now well known, Obama’s stimulus plan, formally called the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009, contained a provision stipulating that all of the “iron, steel and manufactured goods used in the project are [to be] produced in the United States.”
The Canadian Manufacturers and Exporters (CME) noted in a May 25 briefing document that two subsequent bills, the Water Quality Investment Act, and the Green Schools Act contain similar protectionist clauses and the CME fears that most new appropriations bills will contain similar language.
Initial hopes that Canada would be protected by existing trade agreements proved mostly false. Much of the stimulus money is transferred to the states and local government for “shovel-ready” public projects to be started immediately. State and municipal procurement preferences are not covered under existing international treaties.
The Canadian government has been active on the issue since Buy American first emerged, and the Canadian Embassy in Washington brought all 13 of Canada’s consul generals to Capitol Hill on June 9 [see video below] to hold meetings with a reported total of 75 members of Congress and staff. Read more here.