As trade bottlenecks weigh on economy, Liberals urged to help reshape supply chains
OTTAWA — For most of his years in manufacturing, Dennis Darby remembers sourcing goods from a single supplier and things arriving just on time.
The system worked well until the pandemic, which now has throttled the movement of goods globally, pushed up costs for shippers and helped fuel higher inflation rates.
As just one example, the cost of a shipping container has gone from just under $2,000 in 2019 to about $10,000 now, said Darby, president of Canadian Manufacturers and Exporters, a national industry association. That extra cost has to be passed on, ultimately to the consumer.
The situation is leading to calls on the federal government to use the current snarl in global supply chains to become more active in rethinking and reshaping the country’s reliance on foreign suppliers.

