Slow economic growth bad for Canada’s foreign policy goals: experts
OTTAWA — Canada’s slow economic growth and poor competitiveness are undercutting its global interests, experts say, as the post-“sunny ways” version of the Trudeau government’s foreign policy emerges Wednesday with the announcement of a new cabinet.
The key moving parts include a replacement for Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland, who might be given a new domestic portfolio — perhaps deputy prime minister — and the fact that International Trade Minister Jim Carr is fighting a form of blood cancer that makes him an unlikely candidate for a heavy travel schedule.
While managing Canada relations with the United States and China remain the paramount priorities, Canada’s low-growth economy is eroding its broader standing on the world stage, said Trevin Stratton, the chief economist of the Canadian Chamber of Commerce.
Canada’s international ranking in a series of global surveys has continued to decline in recent months, including during the federal election campaign, he said.