Trump Makes Canada Free Again

Jack

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The ongoing trade imbroglio occasioned by President Donald Trump's aggressively tariff-forward policy stance is roiling global markets across industries. The alcohol sector is being
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as many industry watchers
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could happen in the event of Trump-initiated trade wars with the European Union, Mexico, and Canada.

While the latest developments—including the president's threat
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to impose a 200 percent tariff on European alcohol—are par for the course when it comes to the economic fallout of tariffs, Canada's
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could cause long-term damage to American alcohol markets. Unique features of the Canadian system of alcohol regulation could dry up American alcohol sales within our northern neighbor's borders for decades.

In response to Trump's 25 percent tariff on Canadian goods, the Canadian government decided to
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all U.S. alcohol from the shelves of its provincial-run alcohol stores. Both the U.S. and Canada regulate alcohol at the sub-national level, but with a key difference: While most American liquor stores are privately owned (except in the
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
),
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Canadian provinces rely on government-run liquor stores.

Government-controlled alcohol stores are
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for freedom, but they prove surprisingly handy in an international trade dispute in which a country wants to inflict maximal pain on its neighbors. Having a system of government-owned stores allows entire swaths of Canada to effectively lock American alcohol out of the marketplace entirely. Rather than just making American whiskey 25 percent more expensive in Canada, it may no longer exist inside the country's marketplace.

Jack Daniels' CEO Lawson Whiting
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Canada's move "worse than a tariff because it's literally taking your sales away completely, removing our products on the shelves." Canada is currently the U.S. alcohol industry's
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
, with the province of Ontario alone accounting for around $1 billion in American alcohol sales each year.

The impacts have already been immediate, with distilleries like Michter's in Louisville announcing $115,000 in
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
bourbon orders, while liquor giant Diageo is estimating losses of up to
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
. Craft distilleries near the border—like those in
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
and
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—could suffer the most, given both their small size and their interconnectedness with the Canadian market.

Up until recently, Canadian whiskey was losing
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
to American bourbon within Canada's borders—a trend that one can now expect to reverse, as Canadian consumers rally around the flag in a bout of "buy local" boozy patriotism. (One Canadian brewery even
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
its "Presidential Pack," which contains 1,461 beers, enough for the buyer to have one for each remaining day of the Trump administration).

For its part, Canada struggles under its own thicket of overly burdensome and competition-hampering domestic alcohol regulations. Predictions of a "
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
" are spreading across the country as calls increase for the Canadian government to liberalize the country's alcohol markets, as evidenced by the recent
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
to remove internal alcohol trade barriers between provinces.

While many Canadian craft alcohol producers
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
the difficulty they face in getting their products carried in the provincial-run stores, that too may be poised to change with the advent of a renewed deregulatory ethos inside the country. As one Canadian micro-distiller
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
: "We happen to have a lot of shelf space right now. They've just removed all of these American spirits."

The alcohol trade wars are hurting America in the normal ways one would expect tariffs to, but they're also having the unintended consequence of focusing the minds of Canadian government officials to deregulate their own bad booze laws—which, while good news for Canada, will just hurt American producers even more.

Trump promised to "Make America Great Again," but the main effect of his tariff policies could actually be to Make Canada Free Again.
 

LotusBud

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The ongoing trade imbroglio occasioned by President Donald Trump's aggressively tariff-forward policy stance is roiling global markets across industries. The alcohol sector is being
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
as many industry watchers
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
could happen in the event of Trump-initiated trade wars with the European Union, Mexico, and Canada.

While the latest developments—including the president's threat
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
to impose a 200 percent tariff on European alcohol—are par for the course when it comes to the economic fallout of tariffs, Canada's
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
could cause long-term damage to American alcohol markets. Unique features of the Canadian system of alcohol regulation could dry up American alcohol sales within our northern neighbor's borders for decades.

In response to Trump's 25 percent tariff on Canadian goods, the Canadian government decided to
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
all U.S. alcohol from the shelves of its provincial-run alcohol stores. Both the U.S. and Canada regulate alcohol at the sub-national level, but with a key difference: While most American liquor stores are privately owned (except in the
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
),
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
Canadian provinces rely on government-run liquor stores.

Government-controlled alcohol stores are
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
for freedom, but they prove surprisingly handy in an international trade dispute in which a country wants to inflict maximal pain on its neighbors. Having a system of government-owned stores allows entire swaths of Canada to effectively lock American alcohol out of the marketplace entirely. Rather than just making American whiskey 25 percent more expensive in Canada, it may no longer exist inside the country's marketplace.

Jack Daniels' CEO Lawson Whiting
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
Canada's move "worse than a tariff because it's literally taking your sales away completely, removing our products on the shelves." Canada is currently the U.S. alcohol industry's
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
, with the province of Ontario alone accounting for around $1 billion in American alcohol sales each year.

The impacts have already been immediate, with distilleries like Michter's in Louisville announcing $115,000 in
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
bourbon orders, while liquor giant Diageo is estimating losses of up to
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
. Craft distilleries near the border—like those in
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
and
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
—could suffer the most, given both their small size and their interconnectedness with the Canadian market.

Up until recently, Canadian whiskey was losing
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
to American bourbon within Canada's borders—a trend that one can now expect to reverse, as Canadian consumers rally around the flag in a bout of "buy local" boozy patriotism. (One Canadian brewery even
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
its "Presidential Pack," which contains 1,461 beers, enough for the buyer to have one for each remaining day of the Trump administration).

For its part, Canada struggles under its own thicket of overly burdensome and competition-hampering domestic alcohol regulations. Predictions of a "
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
" are spreading across the country as calls increase for the Canadian government to liberalize the country's alcohol markets, as evidenced by the recent
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
to remove internal alcohol trade barriers between provinces.

While many Canadian craft alcohol producers
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
the difficulty they face in getting their products carried in the provincial-run stores, that too may be poised to change with the advent of a renewed deregulatory ethos inside the country. As one Canadian micro-distiller
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
: "We happen to have a lot of shelf space right now. They've just removed all of these American spirits."

The alcohol trade wars are hurting America in the normal ways one would expect tariffs to, but they're also having the unintended consequence of focusing the minds of Canadian government officials to deregulate their own bad booze laws—which, while good news for Canada, will just hurt American producers even more.

Trump promised to "Make America Great Again," but the main effect of his tariff policies could actually be to Make Canada Free Again.
It's interesting. Portugal is pretty focused on producing and buying products in and from Portugal, so I don't think Trump's BS will impact us too, too much. And I just have to keep thinking, "Good for Portugal." Of course, we do sell shit to the US, but it's not as bad as a lot of countries, I don't think.
 
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Jack

Jack

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It's interesting. Portugal is pretty focused on producing and buying products in and from Portugal, so I don't think Trump's BS will impact us too, too much. And I just have to keep thinking, "Good for Portugal." Of course, we do sell shit to the US, but it's not as bad as a lot of countries, I don't think.
Portugal has a trade deficit, but not like ours and is not dependent on American goods.

It should dodge this coming bullet pretty effortlessly.
 
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X

Human being, irreparable heart ......
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It's interesting. Portugal is pretty focused on producing and buying products in and from Portugal, so I don't think Trump's BS will impact us too, too much. And I just have to keep thinking, "Good for Portugal." Of course, we do sell shit to the US, but it's not as bad as a lot of countries, I don't think.
I don’t think to many people are worried what Portugal does LOL
 
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Jack

Jack

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I know people with no hearts give no shits about other countries, but I live in Portugal, so I worry. But I'm also proud of us.
You should be. Portugal is beautiful.

On my bucket list to visit around this time next year.
 

X

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I know people with no hearts give no shits about other countries, but I live in Portugal, so I worry. But I'm also proud of us
Nothing to worry about, America couldn’t give two shits about Portugal
 
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Jack

Jack

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I hope you aren't allowed to vote in Canada.
It's funny when Canucks try to parse what America is doing.

Again, I really thing this stuff will unravel pretty soon. The seams are already bursting with all the bullshit.

Just one spark will set it off. As a country, we are in more serious trouble than in any time previously.

Russia won't have to do a damn thing to topple this country it seems.
 

LotusBud

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It's funny when Canucks try to parse what America is doing.

Again, I really thing this stuff will unravel pretty soon. The seams are already bursting with all the bullshit.

Just one spark will set it off. As a country, we are in more serious trouble than in any time previously.

Russia won't have to do a damn thing to topple this country it seems.
It'll unravel, for sure. But how? It could go more full-on fascist if some grownups don't step up to the plate.
 
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Jack

Jack

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It'll unravel, for sure. But how? It could go more full-on fascist if some grownups don't step up to the plate.
As far as the full on fascist...we've already arrived.

Like germany in the 30's, people are parsing before acting.
 

LotusBud

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As far as the full on fascist...we've already arrived.

Like germany in the 30's, people are parsing before acting.
The door has definitely been opened and people are willingly stepping through, but we're still in a position to get rid of the fucker without needing a world war to save us, imo.
 
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Jack

Jack

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The door has definitely been opened and people are willingly stepping through, but we're still in a position to get rid of the fucker without needing a world war to save us, imo.
Just need someone with a better aim.
 

X

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As far as the full on fascist...we've already arrived.

Like germany in the 30's, people are parsing before acting.
Is parsing when you can’t quite swallow the cock?
 

The Prowler

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I don’t think to many people are worried what Portugal does LOL

Portugal is talking about reneging on the purchase of some F-35s.

Portugal better make sure it does not become a USA territory full of armed forces and nukes.

I am sure that would make Europe comfortable....

Hahahaha!!!!