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Canada says G7 finance chiefs to focus on restoring stability, growth
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Canada says G7 finance chiefs to focus on restoring stability, growth

Reuters

BANFF, Alberta—Finance ministers from the Group of Seven (G7) industrial democracies will try to agree on policies to restore global growth and stability, Canadian Finance Minister Francois-Philippe Champagne said on Tuesday, acknowledging that tensions over new US tariffs would continue.

The meetings over the next two days in the mountain resort town of Banff, Alberta, will be about “back to basics” and will include discussions about excess manufacturing capacity, nonmarket practices and financial crimes, Champagne told a news conference.

“I think to deliver for the citizens that we represent, our mission is really about restoring stability and growth,” Champagne said

He said discussions would take place within the G7 and bilaterally with US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent about the impact of President Donald Trump’s new tariffs on trading partners, and that there would always be tewnsion around such issues.

“But at the same time, there’s a lot we can achieve together,” Champagne said. “There’s a lot that we are looking to coordinate, our actions, and really tackle some of the big issues around over-capacity, nonmarket practices and financial crimes.”

Bessent has sought to push G7 allies to more effectively confront China’s state-led, export-driven economic policies, arguing that this has led to excess manufacturing capacity that is flooding the world with cheap goods and threatening G7 and other market economies.

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But G7 members Japan, Germany, France and Italy all face a potential doubling of reciprocal US duties to 20 percent or more in early July. Britain negotiated a limited trade deal that leaves it saddled with 10 percent US tariffs on most goods, and host Canada is still struggling with Trump’s separate 25-percent duty on many exports.

Champagne also said that the G7 group would discuss ways to better police low-value package shipments from China to combat smuggling. The Trump administration has ended a duty-free exemption for Chinese shipments valued under $800, which it has blamed for the trafficking of fentanyl and its precursor chemicals.

Reducing fentanyl trafficking is critical to lifting Trump’s 25-percent duties on some Canadian and Mexican goods, as well as a 20-percent duty on Chinese goods.

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