OTTAWA, Canada, CMC – Canada and the Caribbean recorded more than CAD$1.8 billion (One Canadian dollar=US$0.73 cents) in merchandise trade last year, Canada’s Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said Thursday.
Addressing the trade and investment round table discussion on the final day of the Canada-CARICOM summit, Trudeau said various trade programs make this trading relationship possible by providing many Caribbean countries with duty-free access to goods.
“We want to grow this trade even more to create good jobs, and I am happy to announce today that we will be expanding duty-free access under the Commonwealth Caribbean countries tariff program to textile and apparel.
Canada Prime Minister Justin Trudeau addressing roundtable discussion on trade and investment (CMC Photo)
He said to strengthen the ties between businesses in Canada and the Caribbean workers they employ, “Canada is committed to implementing a new foreign labor program for agriculture and fish processing under our temporary foreign worker program.”
Trudeau said that private capital could also help build up a clean economy in an area with a lot of potential for profit, prosperity, and the common good “and support the region in achieving sustainable development goals (SDGs).
“Things like green infrastructure, smart agriculture, renewable energy, clean technology, and so much more are all areas in which Canadian innovation and businesses are growing, and opportunities to partner with friends in the Caribbean are outstanding.”
Trudeau said it was also essential to ensure that the benefits of growth are felt by persons across the two regions, “which include ensuring that women and girls, LBGQTI persons and those of all racial backgrounds share in this prosperity and can build the futures they want.”
He said close people-to-people ties make doing business with the Caribbean a “natural fit” and that the conversations held over the past days, “we have seen the potential, the opportunities that exist between our friendship.
“Now is the time to dig in and further concretize and expand with more ambition,” he added.
Guyana’s President, Irfaan Ali, deputizing for Dominica’s Prime Minister Roosevelt Skerrit, as co-chair of the summit, said one of the essential outcomes of the discussions on Thursday “is to reset the trade and investment button, and we are doing this at the highest level demonstrating to the private sector here in Canada and our region that we are serious about expanding our trade and looking at investment opportunities.
“This component of the summit by itself tells the seriousness that we are putting towards trade and investment and the role of the private sector in the rest of our relationship,” Ali added.