Canada has taken a major step in its relationship with the United States. Prime Minister Mark Carney declared that the old economic partnership with America is effectively over after rising tensions, tariffs, and political threats from Donald Trump.
The U.S. imposed 25% tariffs on key Canadian exports like steel, aluminum, and automobiles, and Canada responded with its own counter-tariffs. This has disrupted one of the world’s largest trade relationships, worth over $700 billion annually.
Carney is now pushing Canada to reduce dependence on the U.S. by expanding trade with other regions like Asia and Europe. Early signs show Canada increasing exports to non-U.S. countries while trade with America declines.
This economic shift could raise costs for Americans—especially for cars, fuel, and goods—because both countries’ supply chains are deeply connected.
In short, Canada is restructuring its economy to rely less on the U.S., and this growing divide could have real financial impacts on everyday people in both countries.
First, Mark Carney (former governor of both the Bank of England and Bank of Canada) has been vocal about shifts in the global economy, especially around trade fragmentation and geopolitical tensions. But there’s no credible evidence he declared that “America’s trade era is over” or announced anything like a literal “$761 billion divorce.”
What is real is a broader trend: global trade is becoming more complicated. Tensions between the United States and partners like China, as well as efforts to “reshore” or “friend-shore” supply chains, are changing how countries do business. Leaders and economists—including Carney—have warned that globalization as we knew it is evolving, not ending.
The “$761 billion” figure likely refers to trade volume (for example, U.S.–China trade flows in recent years), but framing it as a “divorce” suggests a sudden break—which simply isn’t happening. Trade between major economies is still massive, even with tariffs, sanctions, and political friction.
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