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US loses meat labelling case; trade war looms

 


Winston Churchill once said that democracy was the worst system of government except when compared with everything else. Of course, he had Hitler, Stalin and Mussolini in mind, not Hong Kong's Tung Chee-hwa or Singapore's Lee Kuan Yew when considering everything else.

Whatever Tung and Lee's faults, and however disappointing they were to democratic purists, it must be admitted that they steered clear of the many inevitable pitfalls in that democracies throw up the world over.

No better example can be found these days than in the senseless quarrel between Mexico and Canada on one side and the United States on the other. Here are three friendly nations, normally on excellent terms with each other, threatening to loose a trade war over meat labels, under a US law called COOL - Country of Origin Labelling.

The problem is that for the US meat trade to comply with COOL rules, meat wholesalers must verify the provenance of imported meat to the satisfaction of various US federal inspectorates - all of which costs time and money - so why bother. Which is what the framers of the regulations intended, says the bitter Mexicans and Canadians.

What more, the World Trade Organisation (WTO) agrees. It's an unfair non-tariff trade barrier and as such, against the rules WTO members have agreed to, it declared. But at this writing, the COOL rule was still the law of the land with free traders on one side against an unlikely alliance of rootin'-tootin' cattlemen and the worry warts of the health & safety brigade, who fear for everyone's health and safety.

Thus, Mexicans and Canadians are girding their loins for battle, fixing to slap tariffs on US wine, chocolate, ketchup and cereal as well as 100 per cent surtax on frozen orange juice, stainless steel pipes and tubes, swivel chairs and mattresses - all of which will cost those damned Yankees US$2.47 billion a year.  In like manner, the Mexicans and fixing up to retaliate against the Americans. They haven't a list yet, but they figure the Gringos will suffer to the tune of $653 million before it's all over.

How did such good neighbours come to such an impasse? It is fair to say that if any one who is a party to this dispute was confronted with the facts and imagined it to apply to countries other than their own, there would be widespread agreement, except perhaps for the health and safety brigade that never saw a regulation it didn't like.

But apart from them, most would agree that the situation is downright silly. But because someone's ox is being gored, someone's industry is being threatened. Politicians who would never take the positions they do today adopt opinions they would not adopt if the situation did not apply to themselves and constituents vital to their own political survival.

Republicans - at least those without threatened and now threatening constituents, who still have majority in Congress, indicate they may act to repeal the COOL law, but health and safety consumer groups, with whom Democrats are allied, say COOL provides "essential information" for shoppers.

The Canadian meat sector industries say the rules have nothing to do with safety and only add to expenses and have cut livestock exports, driving some farmers out of business and costing them more than US$1 billion a year.

"Our governments will be seeking authorisation from the WTO to take retaliatory measures against US exports," the Mexican and Canadian ministers for trade and agriculture said in a joint statement.

The Republican chairman of the House of Representatives Committee on Agriculture, Michael Conaway, called for swift action repeal the offensive law.
 

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