bankside
JUB 10k Club
Good luck with that trade wall you're building. I see you won't be using any Canadian lumber as it goes up. Oh well! 
Read the rest of the article at The Economist
I love free trade. And I love new markets. This development makes me very happy; we've worked very hard to develop alternative markets and it is paying off. I'm glad China loves our product and that it's suitable for the growth of their economy as well.. And, oil's next! Pipeline to Prince Rupert
WHEN the United States and Canada first began arguing about lumber, Ronald Reagan had just taken office in Washington, DC, and Pierre Trudeau was prime minister in Ottawa. Three decades later the two countries are still at it. In January American trade officials asked a London arbitration court to penalise exports from British Columbia, Canada’s main source of lumber, for subsidies stemming from the underpricing of timber harvested from public lands.
This is an old—and unproven—claim, and such filings have sometimes led to the United States imposing countervailing duties. This time the huffing and puffing was met by a nonchalant shrug. What has changed is that for British Columbian lumbermen the United States is no longer the only game in town. Asia has become an alternative.
Read the rest of the article at The Economist
I love free trade. And I love new markets. This development makes me very happy; we've worked very hard to develop alternative markets and it is paying off. I'm glad China loves our product and that it's suitable for the growth of their economy as well.. And, oil's next! Pipeline to Prince Rupert


















