• History and cultural heritage as colonial possessions
• First colonies in Canada were founded in the early XVIII century
• Major links with the Anglophone Caribbean and, in a lesser extent, with the French Caribbean
Canada and the Caribbean
Trade and military links
Port of Halifax
Its naval facilities served the British Navy to secure colonial control in the Caribbean islands and as a main door for Terranova cod exports to the British possessions in the Caribbean and to Cuba
Early XX Century: Poor trade exchange
• USA hegemony in the continent: the Caribbean is
perceived as the next frontier
• Canada is immersed in a process of national
construction
• Despite the benefits of the common relation due to
the Preferential Tariff Regime within the Britain
Empire (1898, 1900, 1904, 1907) and a Trade
Agreement between Canada and the West Indies
from 1920, the Caribbean-Canada trade was
insignificant
• The Bank of Nova Scotia opened its first
international branch outside the U.S. in 1889, in
Kingston, Jamaica
• In 1926 two-thirds of Canadian branches abroad
were based in the Caribbean
• Most of these branches were located outside the
Anglophone Caribbean, in territories of major
interest to the USA: Cuba, Haiti, Puerto Rico and
the Dominican Republic (144 branches, only 44 in
the USA)
But significant financial presence
Prime Minister Lester Pearson (1963-68)
• Incorporation of the new independent states in the Caribbean to the Commonwealth
• Traveled the Caribbean and invite the Caribbean states to the Conference in Ottawa in 1966:
a. To stimulate the relations with Canada
b. To promote trade (Commonwealth Caribbean Canada Trade and Economic Committee, First Meeting in February 1967 in Saint Lucia)
c. To channel aid funds to the Caribbean
Pierre Elliot Trudeau (1968- 1984) • Considered the Father of the Modern Canada
• New principles and practice of the Canadian foreign policy (independent from the USA and UK): Third Option / North-South instead of East-West
• 1970: Foreign Policy for Canadians
a. Europe, Latin American and the Caribbean
b. International Aid and Cooperation: creation of the Canadian International Development Agency (CIDA) and the International Research Development Center (IRDC)
c. Middle power: Canada as “the largest of the smallest powers and the smallest of large powers”
Trudeau and the Caribbean• The Caribbean is a priority in Canada foreign policy
• Special relation with leaders in the area: Manley and Fidel
• Increasing aid funds: transport, public healthcare, scholarships
• Military cooperation: training programs (coastguards, military) and participation in the reconstruction of the Guyanese police force
• Opened Canada to Caribbean migration when UK enforced restrictions to receive Caribbean immigrants
• Canada joined the Caribbean Development Bank
• 1979: Trade and Economic Cooperation Agreement (Conference Canada –CARICOM in Jamaica)
• Alignment with the USA (Middle Power?)
• Hemispheric projection (Open Regionalism)
• Cooperation in neo-liberal economic reform
• Main sectors:
a. Trade and economical relations (finance and banking)
b. Democratic Governability
c. Security (40% drugs in Canada enters from the Caribbean)
d. Disaster Management
Progressive changes since the late 80’s…
Mechanisms• Regional organizations
• Bilateral relations
• Special Programs
• Cooperation for Development (facing the South-South Cooperation)
• Caribbean diaspora in Canada
• Joint Trade and Economic Committee (JTEC)
• Canada-CARICOM Summits (last in 2007)
Canada’s interests on the Caribbean
• To promote national interests
• To avoid frictions with the USA
• To promote economical relations (trade and investment in the mining sector, banking)
• Main pillars of Canada’s International Development Cooperation
1. Democratic Governability
2. Prosperity – Economic Cooperation (Single Market)
3. Security (Natural Disasters)
Main actions in the XXI Century• July, 2007: Announcement of 600 millions CAN dollars for
ten years as regional aid and negotiate a FTA
• Increased presence in Haiti (no debt, cuota in the CDB)
• 20 millones CAN dollars assignation for the Program of
Extreme Events Risk Management in the Caribbean
• Antidrug Program
• Creation of the Caribbean Public Health Agency (CARPHA)
in 2011
• Inter American Regional Program (Economic Growth and
Children and Youth)
• Announcement of representing the Caribbean interests in
the G-20 Meetings
Canada-CARICOM: Exports and ImportsCanada Exports
2006 2007 2008 2009 2010
Rest of the World (%)
99,85 99,84 99,81 99,79 99,80
CARICOM (%) 0,15 0,16 0,19 0,21 0,20
CARICOM (thousandsUSD)
593.044 676.835 854.591 661.379 755.256
Canada Imports
2006 2007 2008 2009 2010
Rest of the World (%)
99,71 99,64 99,63 99,62 99,60
CARICOM (%) 0,29 0,36 0,37 0,38 0,40
CARICOM (thousandsUSD)
1.020.718 1.373.703 1.531.254 1.226.222 1.570.445
Source: Antonio Romero “Relaciones Económicas…” in Conexión Canadá-Caribe, 2013
Canada CARICOM: Trade Balance (thousands USD)
-1000,000
-500,000
0
500,000
1000,000
1500,000
2000,000
2006 2007 2008 2009 2010
Canada Exports Canada Imports Trade Balance
Canada Export Destinations in CARICOM (%) 2010
38
20
17
6
5
43
7
Trinidad y Tobago
Bahamas
Jamaica
Haití
Barbados
Guyana
Antigua y Barbuda
Otros
Source: Antonio Romero “Relaciones Económicas…” in Conexión Canadá-Caribe, 2013
Canada Import Origins in CARICOM (%) 2010
Source: Antonio Romero “Relaciones Económicas…” in Conexión Canadá-Caribe, 2013
37
28
18
10
3 2
1 1
Suriname
Trinidad y Tobago
Guyana
Jamaica
Bahamas
Haití
Barbados
Otros
CANADA-CARICOM Trade
• Canada exports: manufactures, foodstuffs, and processed materials (newsprint, meslin /wheat, medicaments, telephone equipment, salt fish, copper wire, electrical equipment, potatoes)
• Canada imports: gold, petroleum and alumina (75 % of the total). Also ferrous products, rum, roots and tubers, beer, bakery products, liqueurs, sauces and condiments, nutmeg, and frozen fish
Canada – CARICOM trade instruments
• 1979: CARICOM-Canada Trade and Economic Co-operation Agreement and its Protocols
• 1998: Protocol on Rum
• 1985: Caribbean-Canada Trade Agreement (CARIBCAN): grants unilateral duty free access to eligible goods from beneficiary countries in the Commonwealth Caribbean (waiver of WTO)
• General Preferential Tariff of Canada
• WTO Most Favored Nation (84% CARICOM exports!!!!!! in 2007)
• Negotiation of a FTA!!!
Canada – CARICOM FTA: issues to considered
• Major implementation costs for CARICOM
• Canada exports to CARICOM duty free affects the fiscal income and could replace domestic producers in sector where Canada has more competitiveness
• Services: tourism and international financial services do not need an FTA
• New framework for bilateral economic, political, social and cultural relations (not only aid but development)
• The EU would be entitled to invoke the EPA’s MFN clause to demand similar treatment than Canada
Pushing in the negotiations for:• Duty free facilities for agricultural products, clothing, rum,
cultural and creative services, workers, etc.
• More generous rules of origin (only 60% in CARIBCAN)
• Advocate in favor of economic and sustainable development and the validity of the principle of special and differential treatment through:
a. Asymmetrical obligations in favor of CARICOM states;
b. Progressive liberalization of goods and services trade; and
c. Cooperation including technical and financial assistance to facilitate adjustment to liberalization, and trade facilitation, notably to build capacity for exports by the predominantly small firms in the CARICOM region
Canadian Investments
• Bilateral Foreign Investment Protection Agreements (FIPA)
Trinidad & Tobago (July, 1996)
Barbados (January, 1997)
• November 2008, Canada CARICOM Business Forum: Few CARICOM firms attended
Limits to Canada-Caribbean relationsThe close relations with the USA: Tension between sovereignty and strategic interests
• 40% of the GDP generation depends on the economical links with the USA)
World Economic Crisis
• More selectivity criteria to aid resources allocation
• More selectivity in accepting immigrants (qualified work force)
Tendency to promote “assistancialism” rather than capacity building
Bibliography in English
1. Ramesh Chaitoo, “Time to Rethink and Re-energize Canada-CARICOM Relations”, in Caribbean Journal of International Relations & Diplomacy, Vol. 1, No. 1, February 2013: pp.39-67
2. Norman Girvan, The Caricom-Canada FTA: What’s the hurry?, March 23, 2009
3. Winston H. Griffith, “CARICOM Countries and the Caribbean Basin Initiative”, in Latin American Perspectives, Vol. 17, No. 1, Caribbean Crisis and Global Restructuring. (Winter, 1990), pp. 33-54.
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