delete Steel Derivative Goods Surtax Remission Order
The Steel Derivative Goods Remission Order grants relief of surtaxes imposed under the Steel Derivative Goods Surtax Order for specific steel import categories. It provides remission for: (1) goods imported by healthcare, public health, public safety, and national security entities; (2) goods for medically necessary health care services; (3) specific goods listed in a detailed schedule; and (4) wind towers for offshore energy projects. Conditions include no other relief claim and a two-year limitation for claims. The schedule enumerates hundreds of specific steel products including cable-barrier components, bolts, studs, panels, grinding balls, and couplings.
This regulation perpetuates a flawed protectionist mechanism. The surtax itself distorts trade; creating targeted exemptions merely layers political favoritism onto a market distortion. Administrative complexity increases as officials must verify claimed uses. The government picking winners (healthcare users, defense contractors) over others (manufacturers, construction firms) via differential tax treatment undermines economic neutrality. While health and safety exemptions may seem compassionate, they cement a system where politically connected entities receive preferential treatment. Canadians would be better off with a genuinely free market in steel — no surtax and no exemptions — rather than this patchwork of targeted relief that rewards lobbying over efficiency.