Ottawa, Kyiv ink trade deal during Ukrainian PM’s visit

The Canadian Press | July 14, 2015

Ottawa, Kyiv ink trade deal during Ukrainian PM’s visit

By Terry Pedwell

Canada has reached a trade agreement with Ukraine that Prime Minister Stephen Harper says will help the Eastern European country build its economy and establish greater ties with the West.

The deal, which needs parliamentary approval, would eventually see a near-elimination of duties on goods coming into Canada from Ukraine.

It comes as the government of Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko grapples with a populist move to water down economic changes demanded by the International Monetary Fund. Harper announced the free-trade agreement as he met Tuesday with Ukraine’s prime minister, Arseniy Yatsenyuk, making clear that the deal was not just about creating jobs, but also a signal of Canada’s continued commitment to aid Ukraine in its fight against Russian-backed aggression in the country’s east.

"This is increasing economic opportunity for Canadians and Ukrainians," Harper said as he stood alongside Yatsenyuk at a government conference centre that overlooks picturesque Meech Lake in Chelsea, Que.

"It’s also, I think, a step toward helping Ukrainians realize the future that they want," Harper added. "Ukrainians do not want a future based on oppression and a Soviet past. The Ukrainian people want a Western future, a future of prosperity."

Once in force, the agreement would eliminate 99.9 per cent of tariffs on current imports from Ukraine into Canada, and 86 per cent of Ukrainian tariffs on Canadian products, including all tariffs on industrial goods, forestry and wood products, fish and seafood products.

Canadian pork producers would continue to face trade barriers, but others, including grains and oil seeds exporters and beef producers, would gain unhindered access to Ukraine’s market. Total back-and-forth trade between Canada and Ukraine averaged $347 million between 2011 and 2013, according to Canadian government officials, but slowed to just $244 million last year as Ukraine dealt with political upheaval and armed conflict in southern and eastern parts of the country. Canada has also provided Ukraine with $400 million in low-interest loans since a political crisis erupted there in 2013.

Beyond its potential economic value, though, the trade agreement cemented Canada’s involvement in helping Ukraine move away from Russian influence, Yatsenyuk said as he thanked Harper for his resolve in achieving the deal. "You, together with our international friends and partners, you are the flagship in supporting Ukraine in our quest and fight against the Russian-led terrorists," Yatsenyuk said before the two men shook hands.

Aside from improving trade and providing financial support to Kyiv, Canada has also given non-lethal military aid to Ukraine to help fight pro-Moscow separatists. Ottawa is also expected to send Canadian Forces personnel to train Ukrainian troops.

On Monday, Yatsenyuk visited Washington, where U.S. Vice-President Joe Biden warned the Ukrainian government to start curbing corruption.

source : The Canadian Press

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