Region ranked 36th among cities facing tariff impacts

Another day, another market-shaking remark from the economic elephant south of the border. After giving Canada a 30-day reprieve from his initial 25% tariff threat, US President Donald Trump surprised everyone by announcing a 25% tariff on steel and aluminum.

The seemingly random rhetoric has created uncertainty in the business world — a world that places a high value on planning for the future.

To help us better understand what a trade war might mean for Canadian communities, the national chamber network’s Business Data Lab has taken a deep dive into the potential impact on 41 Canadian cities.

The good news for Greater Victoria is we are low on the list at 36.

“Near the bottom of the list are cities that are less exposed to the tariffs because they trade less intensively with the US and/or have more diversified trade patterns. Several of these cities are located on Canada’s coasts, exporting more to Asia from the West Coast, or more to Europe from the East Coast,” the report said. “In British Columbia this includes Victoria, Nanaimo and Kamloops. On the East Coast it’s Halifax, Nova Scotia. And it appears that Sudbury’s exports of nickel and copper are reaching other international markets beyond the United States.”

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