A majority of Canadians would be hesitant to buy U.S. goods in response to the proposed American tariff on products from Canada, according to a new survey.
A majority of Canadians would be hesitant to buy U.S. goods in response to the proposed American tariff on products from Canada, according to a new survey.
The findings of a recently released Nanos Research survey suggest a tariff on Canadian exports into the U.S. would, for two-thirds of Canadians, negatively impact the likelihood they'd purchase U.S.-made goods.
On Nov. 25, U.S. president-elect Donald Trump said he would impose a 25 per cent tariff on imports from Canada and Mexico until the two countries clamped down on drugs, particularly fentanyl, and migrants crossing the border.
I always get a good laugh when I see a giant "PROUDLY MADE IN USA" sticker that has a big US flag.
and it's on a plastic tub. Or a bucket. I think the plastic brush I use to clean my cast-iron pan is from the US, but again it's just a lump of plastic.
I guess I shouldn't be surprised that the most common USA-produced good I interact with is oil.
Except this time, for all its evils, I have AI to suggest meals/recipes based on what Canadian produce looks good and is at a reasonable price in the store.
I used to live in Washington state, and canadians would come across the border and buy up all the pop tarts bcz they didn't have the ones we had (not sure if they didn't have them at all, or the ones we had were better)
But point t is, the shelf would be bare after the weekend from people flocking to buy them out.
Just about anything to do with food is because Canadian versions (much like European versions) don’t have as many nasty ingredients. Just look up Canadian vs American Froot Loops as the most visually striking example (food dyes that are ok in USA but illegal in Canada & EU). I’ve heard Oreos taste completely different in The States too.
Just thought of another example… Americans driving south to get Mexican Coke because they were still using sugar cane instead of high fructose corn syrup.
Because the USD:CAD conversion rate isn't bad enough, let's add huge tariff BS to the mix. Dollar values are one thing, but outright anti-consumer tactics? You don't want our business, fine F U, we're almost certainly better off without.
Doubtful. They might tell a pollster that but there's a big gap between that and making actual changes and even sacrifices in terms of purchasing decisions.
A fair amount of raw materials pass over the borders in the production of so many things that even if they are Canadian made parts and materials may have tariffs on them.