It’s time for Canada’s protectionist barriers to fall

Milk cows
Reading Time: 3 minutes

By Krystle Wittevrongel
and Gabriel Giguère

New Zealand had never launched a dispute under a free trade agreement until two weeks ago, on May 12, when it launched a trade dispute against Canada under the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP),  accusing our government of breaking its promises on dairy imports.

This was also the first dispute launched under the TPP since its signing in 2016. But as the export of dairy products is particularly important for New Zealand’s economy, their concern is understandable.

Krystle Wittevrongel
Krystle Wittevrongel
Gabriel Giguère
Gabriel Giguère

Canada has been heavily criticized for its protectionist supply management system. Earlier this year, the United States won a challenge against Canada’s dairy practices under the Canada-U.S.-Mexico Agreement on trade (CUSMA, also known as USMCA). This was also the first dispute under this new version of the North American agreement.

Repeated disputes and trade issues due to supply management undermine our trade relations.

Besides penalizing our trading partners, supply management is also counterproductive for our own economy. In fact, supply management is one of the most iconic failings of Canadian protectionism. Markets have long been distorted by import quotas, tariffs, and production controls on dairy products, eggs, and poultry.

Tariffs have historically been as high as 300 per cent on butter, which directly impacts consumers, penalizing them through inflated prices in a manipulated and overregulated market. The effect is intensified with generalized inflation now surging.

According to the Organization for Economic Co-Operation and Development (OECD), prohibiting any serious competition whatsoever with producers outside the country costs Canadians an average of $2.6 billion a year. A 2016 Montreal Economic Institute study found that this system increases the average annual grocery bill by $300 to $444.

In today’s dollars, this amounts to between about $349 and $517. Unsurprisingly, low-income families feel this the most. The same 2016 study found that supply management pushed up to 190,000 Canadians into poverty.

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We also need to consider the constraints that the system places on the Canadian agriculture sector. Despite opportunities, Canada’s supply-managed farms simply do not have the ability to increase production. The annual production quotas, purchased at high prices to meet domestic demand, do not allow producers to adjust supply to global demand increases or decreases.

On the one hand, the OECD has predicted that global demand for dairy products will grow by about 1.6 per cent annually between 2020 and 2029, faster than for most other agricultural products. Conversely, dairy quotas have led to the waste of considerable amounts of milk in a number of Canadian provinces – at one point, five million litres a week in Ontario alone during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Canadian policy-makers might want to consider that their New Zealand counterparts could actually know what they’re talking about. Since abandoning its own supply management regime years ago, the country’s industry has become larger and more efficient. Over the past three decades, its annual dairy exports have grown from just over NZ$2 billion to almost $20 billion. In fact, it now exports around 95 per cent of its national production, a statistic which should inspire Canadian leaders.

The same can be said for Australia, which abolished its dairy supply management system 22 years ago. This deregulation resulted in lower prices for consumers – milk prices dropped 12 cents a litre in the first six months– as well as greater productivity and increased milk exports.

With all the benefits to be had, what is the Canadian government waiting for? Moving to a free market for currently supply-managed goods would reduce Canadian grocery bills, offer more choices to consumers, and improve trade relations.

Only harmful protectionist ideology – and, frankly, vote-buying – maintains the current system, hurting both producers and consumers.

Krystle Wittevrongel is a Public Policy Analyst and Gabriel Giguère is a Public Policy Analyst at the Montreal Economic Institute.

Krystle and Gabriel are Troy Media Thought Leaders. For interview requests, click here.


The opinions expressed by our columnists and contributors are theirs alone and do not inherently or expressly reflect the views of our publication.

© Troy Media
Troy Media is an editorial content provider to media outlets and its own hosted community news outlets across Canada.

By Krystle Wittevrongel

Krystle Wittevrongel holds a BA in Development Studies (International Development), a BSc in Biological Sciences, and a Master of Public Policy from the University of Calgary. She has received several academic scholarships for the quality of her work at the graduate level and has published articles in a number of specialized academic journals. She joined the MEI team in February 2021.

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