I realize my question might have been a bit unclear, so let me try to rephrase it. [...] To me, it seems this tariff is primarily intended to protect Canada.
Those are all GREAT questions! Again, please watch the video in
post #70 as that really does explain it best.
Yes, of course, our dairy tariffs and our supply management policies are designed to protect our own Cdn dairy industry and our own dairy farmers. I've explained that before, in
post #74.
I also explained in
post #31 how tariffs are used to protect your other existing domestic industries, like steel production.
The trade agreements between Canada/USA were negotiated and settled in the earlier NAFTA agreement, and by the current USMCA agreement (negotiated and signed by you-know-who). If any details of those treaties are in dispute, there are legal mechanisms by which those disputes can be resolved, and frequently have been resolved (including details concerning trade in dairy products).
As for your specific questions, [again I am
not an expert]:
If that Canadian tariff wasn't currently in place and dairy imports from the US rose to a level that would have triggered the tariff, what would that mean for Canadians?
I don't know how that particular quota number was determined. It's like any set speed limit. If the limit is 60mph, it doesn't mean you're "safe" with no dangerous consequences if you cruise at 59.9mph, or that you're only going to suffer life threatening consequences at 60.1mph or more. It's just some arbitrary number triggering the threshold between whats considered acceptable versus being subject to penalties.
However that dairy quota number was arrived at, it's the negotiated and agreed threshold at which tariffs would apply.
Would Canadian farmers potentially see reduced profits? Could it lead to job losses in the dairy industry? Would it make Canada more dependent on US dairy products?
If everyone else is going 60mph, but some fool is doing 200mph, at some point that
could result in an unacceptable danger to the public. Hence the need to set some arbitrary limit on speed.
So let's say we have a completely open market, and the USA finds some way [slave labour?] to produce dairy products at a quarter the price of what it costs Canadian farmers to produce the same items. Why should we keep paying Cdn farmers their exorbitant fees if we could buy the same stuff practically for free from the USA? Cdn farms would shut down completely and we'd just buy dairy products exclusively from the USA.
Canada
could then impose a 400% tariff on dairy imports from the US. That would raise the cost for Cdn importers equivalent to what our domestic producers are charging. So now there's no longer any incentive to import. The imported stuff then costs the same as the domestic stuff, might as well continue buying from our own farmers. This way our farmers stay in business.
But it sounds stupid if we could be enjoying US dairy products at a quarter of the cost.
But dairy is far more complicated than in just that simplistic example. Again, it's explained the video I posted earlier.
We have different health regulations. Canadians actually care about whether or not our milk is polluted with artificial growth hormones, whereas Americans seem content to have Bobby Kennedy Jr heading their Dept of Health (Jesus wept).
You've mentioned that tariffs only hurt the country that imposes them, so is the Canadian government knowingly doing something that harms its own people?
Again, Canada is collecting
ZERO tariffs on US dairy imports, as the imports from the US have not reached the quota levels at which those tariffs are triggered. So, no, we are not being hurt by those tariffs.
Are we being hurt by paying slightly higher prices for our domestic dairy products? [
Are they actually higher?] If you conducted a poll amongst all Canadians, I think you'd find we're content with our current dairy prices and are ALL deeply grateful that we are not forced to rely exclusively on American suppliers.
I’m not sure we can assume that all US tariffs inherently harm the US or were deliberately enacted by its own government to do so.
Tariffs to protect
existing industries make some sense, but only up to a point. If another country manages to produce an equivalent quality of steel for much less cost than your domestic steel, at which point does it eventually stop making sense to keep subsidizing your overly expensive steel factories?
America has [
had] the strongest economy in the world. It was the first and fastest to recover from the world-wide supply chain disruptions of the Covid pandemic. Your fiscal problem can be boiled down to the simple fact that Americans buy more stuff from foreign countries than they sell to those countries. You have an ongoing and ever-increasing trade
deficit.
Your administration decided to impose exorbitant import tariffs on
everything being imported into your country from
anywhere in the world [
even penguin poop]. I think you'll find a lot of your compatriots are going to wonder why any of that makes any sense.
Reminder: Unless you plan on importing exclusively from Hawaii, how does it make sense to impose an import tax on bananas or coffee beans???