Close X
Saturday, January 11, 2025
ADVT 
National

U.S. bank reform violates NAFTA, Finance Minister Joe Oliver says

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 13 May, 2015 10:29 AM
    NEW YORK — Canada's finance minister says sweeping American bank reforms introduced in the aftermath of the financial crisis violate the North American Free Trade Agreement.
     
    In prepared remarks of a speech delivered Wednesday in New York City, Joe Oliver calls on the U.S. government to change the policy known as the "Volcker rule."
     
    The Volcker rule, adopted in 2010 but has yet to be fully implemented, aims to reduce high-risk trading bets by big banks.
     
    Unless special exemptions are made, however, Oliver said U.S. investors will be at a disadvantage because they won't be permitted to trade in Canadian government debt.
     
    "I believe — with strong legal basis — that this rule violates the terms of the NAFTA agreement," said Oliver's speech, delivered at an event hosted by the Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association.
     
    "I hope the United States administration sees that changing the Volcker rule is in its own best interests and that of its biggest trading partner."
     
    In recent years, senior Canadian officials — including former finance minister Jim Flaherty and former Bank of Canada governor Mark Carney — warned the U.S. government about the Volcker rule's wide-reaching impacts.
     
    Oliver said Americans should have no concerns about Canada's credit standing since its rating is better than that of the U.S. government.
     
    A spokeswoman for Oliver's office said the minister has personally raised his concerns over the Volcker rule in past meetings with Treasury Secretary Jacob Lew.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Alberta Prosecutors File Appeal Of Acquittal In Cindy Gladue Murder Case

    Alberta Prosecutors File Appeal Of Acquittal In Cindy Gladue Murder Case
    EDMONTON — Alberta prosecutors will appeal the acquittal of an Ontario trucker charged with the murder of an aboriginal woman. A jury found Bradley Barton not guilty last month of first-degree murder in the death of Cindy Gladue.

    Alberta Prosecutors File Appeal Of Acquittal In Cindy Gladue Murder Case

    Nancy Ruth Annoyed Auditor Expects Her To Eat 'Awful', But Free, Airline Food

    Nancy Ruth Annoyed Auditor Expects Her To Eat 'Awful', But Free, Airline Food
    OTTAWA — A Conservative senator is miffed that she's being asked to justify claiming a meal expense while travelling when she could have eaten a free airline breakfast of "ice-cold Camembert with broken crackers."

    Nancy Ruth Annoyed Auditor Expects Her To Eat 'Awful', But Free, Airline Food

    Suspended Senator Brazeau To Take The Stand At His Assault Trial: Lawyer

    Suspended Senator Brazeau To Take The Stand At His Assault Trial: Lawyer
    GATINEAU, Que. — Suspended senator Patrick Brazeau will testify in his own defence at his ongoing trial for charges of assault and sexual assault, his lawyer said Thursday.

    Suspended Senator Brazeau To Take The Stand At His Assault Trial: Lawyer

    Joni Mitchell's Famous Fans Tweet Well Wishes To Hospitalized Singer

    Joni Mitchell's Famous Fans Tweet Well Wishes To Hospitalized Singer
    LOS ANGELES — Joni Mitchell's famous fans are voicing their support and worry for the Canadian folk song icon while she is hospitalized in Los Angeles.

    Joni Mitchell's Famous Fans Tweet Well Wishes To Hospitalized Singer

    Seaplane Makes Emergency Landing Into Mud Flats Near Tsawwassen Ferry Terminal After Pilot Faints

    Seaplane Makes Emergency Landing Into Mud Flats Near Tsawwassen Ferry Terminal After Pilot Faints
    VANCOUVER — The coast guard says a passenger seaplane has made an emergency landing not far from the  Tsawwassen, B.C., ferry terminal after its pilot fainted.

    Seaplane Makes Emergency Landing Into Mud Flats Near Tsawwassen Ferry Terminal After Pilot Faints

    Toronto's Indian-Origin Police Officer Mandip Sandhu Loses Appeal On Sexual Assault Conviction

    Toronto's Indian-Origin Police Officer Mandip Sandhu Loses Appeal On Sexual Assault Conviction
    Mandip Sandhu, a police constable of Indian descent in Canada's Toronto city, has been taken into custody to serve a 15-month jail term after an appeal of his conviction and sentence for sexually assaulting a masseuse was dismissed.

    Toronto's Indian-Origin Police Officer Mandip Sandhu Loses Appeal On Sexual Assault Conviction