Champagne says boosting financial trade with China key to broader diversification
Champagne said talks with Chinese officials also covered supply chain integrity and 25% tariffs on Canadian pork.
- Finance Minister Francois-Philippe Champagne completed a Beijing trip focusing on boosting financial trade and collaboration in pension and wealth management between Canada and China.
- Champagne addressed Canada's concerns on human rights, supply chain integrity, and ongoing Chinese tariffs of 25% on Canadian pork products during meetings.
- He emphasized that relationship-building is crucial for expanding trade with China, noting that immediate resolution of trade issues is unrealistic.
38 Articles
38 Articles
China Visit: Minister Champagne Says He Raised ‘Supply Chain Integrity’ When Asked If He Discussed Forced Labour
After leading a Canadian trade delegation in China this week seeking to boost ties in the financial sector, Finance Minister François-Philippe Champagne said he raised the issue of “supply chain integrity” during his visit. Champagne made the comments to reporters on April 3 when asked if he had discussed forced labour in China. Champagne is on a visit to China from March 31 to April 4 as part of Ottawa’s plan to deepen relations with Beijing. T…
Champagne leaves China with pork tariffs still in place, but touts relationship-building
Although Chinese tariffs on Canadian pork products remain in place after a visit to China by Finance Minister François-Philippe Champagne, he says the important task is relationship-building — and it's not realistic to expect immediate solutions.
Champagne says boosting financial trade with China key to broader diversification
OTTAWA - Finance Minister François-Philippe Champagne wrapped up a trip to Beijing where he said the governor of the Bank of Canada and other top Canadian financial officials met with
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