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Question: how will NAFTA's ending affect Americans working in Canada? (Vanity)
Vanity | 6/3/18 | Mamzelle

Posted on 06/03/2018 4:06:00 PM PDT by Mamzelle

There are Americans working in Canada covered by trade provisions that have certain tax privileges. NAFTA is dead as a door nail. What happens when the reality sets in?


TOPICS: Business/Economy
KEYWORDS: aluminum; manufacture; nafta; trudeau

1 posted on 06/03/2018 4:06:00 PM PDT by Mamzelle
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To: Mamzelle

Re: “There are Americans working in Canada covered by trade provisions that have certain tax privileges.”

Just a couple days ago I was scrolling through the “2017 Immigration Yearbook” published by USCIS.

I was completely shocked to see that - from memory - more than 500,000 Mexicans and Canadians are employed in the USA with some kind of connection to NAFTA.


2 posted on 06/03/2018 4:19:01 PM PDT by zeestephen
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To: Mamzelle

If they are adding value, nothing changes. If they have subsidized jobs, polish your resume.


3 posted on 06/03/2018 4:20:07 PM PDT by FatherofFive (Islam is EVIL and needs to be eradicated)
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To: Mamzelle

In the years immediately preceding NAFTA, my wife and I lived in Ann Arbor. My wife worked in downtown Detroit, which was right across the river from Windsor.

For the daily activities average person, the economies could not have been more closely connected. My wife and her co-workers would routinely drive to Canada for lunch. They would only show a drivers license at the border. One time my wife’s friend forgot her wallet and the border guards just smiled waived them through.

We took several weekend excursions to Canada and it honestly felt like we were traveling to another state.

Businesses on both sides of border routinely accepted coins from either side of the border on a 1-1 equivalency, even though the US quarter was worth a few cents more. If you asked an average person to empty their coin purse, it would have coins from both countries co-mingled.

On my first business trip to Canada after they implemented NAFTA, I was shocked at how much had changed. They demanded a passport for entry and exit (I actually talked my way into Canada with only a drivers license that first time, and my wife Fedex-ed my passport to my hotel for the return trip).

It was then that I realized that NAFTA never intended to facilitate economic cooperation for the average person. It was solely intended to benefit a small set of multinational corporations, and made the life of the average person living near the border more inconvenient.

Unfortunately, much has changed, and they will never turn back the clock to casual friendly relationships that existed along the US/Canada border, but I won’t miss NAFTA one bit.


4 posted on 06/03/2018 4:41:08 PM PDT by CaptainMorgantown
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To: Mamzelle

I would anticipate that there will be a period allowed for things to sort out after an announcement - it won’t go into effect immediately.


5 posted on 06/03/2018 4:59:57 PM PDT by BeauBo
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To: BeauBo

My opinion: Trump won’t declare NAFTA dead until it suits him, which may be s long time. He will just let it gasp and spasm without much comment or definitive declaration.


6 posted on 06/03/2018 7:22:06 PM PDT by Mamzelle
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>> Americans working in Canada

Strippers?


7 posted on 06/03/2018 10:07:48 PM PDT by Gene Eric (Don't be a statist!)
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To: CaptainMorgantown

I remember around 2000 walking across the bridge at Niagara Falls and having to pay something like 50 cents to walk back into my own country.


8 posted on 06/04/2018 4:43:37 AM PDT by mowowie
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To: FatherofFive
If they are adding value, nothing changes.

Yup. Lots of them are working in the oilfields of Alberta. That production is critical to Canada's economy. If those workers are needed Canada will find a way to let 'em stick around.

If you are working in some less essential job though you might want to start making plans to come home.


9 posted on 06/04/2018 12:36:04 PM PDT by Buckeye McFrog
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To: CaptainMorgantown

Those border passport provisions had nothing to do with NAFTA. They were a George W. Bush program, implemented after 9-11.


10 posted on 06/04/2018 12:37:11 PM PDT by Buckeye McFrog
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To: Buckeye McFrog

Nope. The passport began to be required for travel to and from Canada in about 1995. I have very specific recollections of nearly not being allowed into Canada with only my dirver’s license as a identification on a business trip to Ottowa. My wife Fedex-ed my passport to me at my hotel for the trip back home.


11 posted on 06/04/2018 12:57:43 PM PDT by CaptainMorgantown
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