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Fact File: Posts falsely claim Canada revoked China’s equal trade status

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Chinese language posts that appeared on social media the past few weeks claimed Canada was one of 32 countries to revoke China's "most favoured nation" trade status on Dec. 1. 

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Chinese language posts that appeared on social media the past few weeks claimed Canada was one of 32 countries to revoke China’s “most favoured nation” trade status on Dec. 1. 

The claim originates from a 2021 rumour that conflates most favoured nation status with “generalized system of preference” certificates, which China stopped issuing to Canada and other countries on Dec. 1 that year. 

China remains a most favoured nation by Canada, meaning it is entitled to equal treatment as a trading partner.

A Chinese flag is illuminated by sunshine in the Hall of Honour on Parliament Hill in Ottawa, on Sept. 22, 2016. China continues to have 'most favoured nation' trade status with Canada, contrary to some recent Chinese language posts on social media. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Adrian Wyld
A Chinese flag is illuminated by sunshine in the Hall of Honour on Parliament Hill in Ottawa, on Sept. 22, 2016. China continues to have 'most favoured nation' trade status with Canada, contrary to some recent Chinese language posts on social media. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Adrian Wyld

THE CLAIM

Since November, several Chinese language posts across western social media claimed Canada was one of 32 countries to revoke China’s “most favoured nation” status. 

Most favoured nation refers to a trade principle that entitles trading partners to equal status. Countries that trade as World Trade Organization members are required to provide the same trade benefits to all countries, with some exceptions. 

An image posted to the X platform, formerly Twitter, and multiple
times on Facebook claimed Canada is one of 32 countries that removed China’s most favoured nation trade status as of Dec. 1.

Similar claims appeared several
times on Threads, as well as YouTube. 

THE FACTS

A keyword search of the Chinese language text shows this isn’t the first time the claim appeared online. 

In 2021, Hong Kong-based HKBU Fact Check reported on the claim, which seemingly originated from a Facebook post. The post made an identical claim about 32 countries removing China’s most favoured nation status on Dec. 1. 

However, a further keyword search shows the original announcement made by the General Administration of Customs China that references the 32 countries.

In the announcement, the customs agency said it would stop issuing generalized system of preference (GSP) certificate of origins for goods exported to 32 countries, including Canada and the European Union. 

The certificates grant preferential tariffs to imports from developing countries, according to the World Trade Organization. 

The Chinese customs agency said some countries pulled their GSP treatment for China over the years, since rapid economic development meant China was no longer considered a low-income country. The agency said it would stop issuing GSP certificates of origin to the 32 countries on Dec. 1. 

A 2021 article from China Briefing discussed the confusion over the announcement, noting the 32 countries stopped giving China GSP status over several years and not all at once. Canada removed its version of the GSP for China and 71 other countries as of Jan. 1, 2015. 

China and Canada are both part of the World Trade Organization, and remain entitled to most favoured nation status. China remains on Canada’s list of countries afforded that status. 

Canada removed most favoured nation status from Russia and Belarus on March 2, 2022 in response to the Russian invasion of Ukraine, and imposed a general tariff of 35 per cent to most goods. However, it made an exception for cobalt-60, a radioactive isotope used in some medical goods, as the government said it was unable to source enough elsewhere. 

With files from Nono Shen. 

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Dec. 11, 2025.

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