New North American trade pact launches under a cloud
USMCA replaces Nafta as supply chains face strain from coronavirus and a mercurial Mexican leader
The then Mexican president Enrique Peña Nieto, left, US president Donald Trump, centre, and Canadian prime minister Justin Trudeau sign a new free trade agreement in Buenos Aires on November 30 2018 on the sidelines of the G20 leaders’ summit © Martin Bernetti/AFP/Getty
A new trade pact between the US, Mexico and Canada begins on Wednesday with the top US negotiator threatening litigation, investor distrust rife and supply chains tested by the Covid-19 pandemic.
While US president Donald Trump and his Mexican counterpart Andrés Manuel López Obrador plan to toast the USMCA at the White House, probably after US Independence Day on July 4, others are more cautious.
“I don’t believe that on July 2, there is going to be a queue of foreign investors in Mexico,” warned Carlos Salazar, head of Mexico’s main business lobby, which has seen relations with the leftist nationalist leader sour.
The North American Free Trade Agreement was born with fanfare and the sense “that Mexico was opening to the world and would become developed and prosperous, and that it could negotiate as equals with the US”, according to Verónica Ortiz, head of Comexi, a foreign affairs think-tank.
By contrast, the US Mexico and Canada Agreement which replaces it was forced into being by Mr Trump. The US president branded Nafta the worst deal ever and vowed to pull out unless there were changes that would encourage companies to repatriate jobs from low-wage Mexico.
Three arduous years of talks ensued, culminating in a deal that went well beyond Nafta. Mr López Obrador is betting the USMCA will bring investment and jobs. The business community, meanwhile, hopes it will enable Mexico to position itself as a manufacturing hub for companies relocating from China amid trade tensions with the US.
But US trade representative Robert Lighthizer warned Mexico to brace for challenges, including over its enforcement of new labour rules, long a thorny issue in negotiations.
“After July 1, I expect to . . . look at complaints . . . and to the extent that we have problems, I expect to bring cases. I think Mexico understands that, I hope they understand that, I’ve made it as clear as I can,” he told a legislative hearing this month.
The new trade pact also comes at a time when abrupt policy shifts from the Mexican president, especially those designed to favour state-run oil company Pemex and utility CFE, have triggered outrage from US companies.
“Just as China is losing its lustre and Mexico should be saying ‘we are open for business, come on over’, they’re putting the brakes on new FDI [foreign direct investment],” said Nelson Balido, a trade consultant based in Texas.
Christopher Landau, US ambassador to Mexico, admitted in a conference call last week with Mexican executives: “I can’t lie. I can’t say it’s an opportune moment to invest in Mexico if we’re seeing things that are very discouraging.”
Mexico’s changes to the rules in the electricity sector, penalising renewables projects to favour the CFE, have triggered complaints and threats of arbitration. Investors are also upset over delays in issuing permits, for filling stations, fuel storage and imported fuel, for example.
In a letter to US secretary of state Mike Pompeo and trade officials, the American Petroleum Institute this month blasted “recent actions . . . [that] discriminate against US investors in violation of commitments that Mexico agreed to in both Nafta and USMCA”.
The American Fuel and Petrochemicals Manufacturers wrote to Mr Trump to complain about Mexican policy which, it said, “threatens not only the direct investment US companies have made but also future revenue and US jobs to make those investments viable”. It raised “serious questions about whether such actions are permissible under Mexican law and Mexico’s obligations under the new USMCA”.
The Global Wind Energy Council, meanwhile, wrote to Rocío Nahle, Mexico’s energy minister, to say that policy changes “have severely deteriorated the investment climate in the sector, and recovering that confidence is all the harder . . . given the Covid-19 crisis”. Cross-border supply chains and a tightly intertwined North American manufacturing industry, in which components cross between the US, Mexico and Canada multiple times before winding up in a finished car, TV or other manufactured good, are the lifeblood of Nafta and USMCA.
But a failure to harmonise Mexico’s official definition of essential industries during the Covid-19 pandemic with that in the US has led to bottlenecks and delays. “Supply chains aren’t keeping up,” said Mr Balido. He added that some US production lines had risked having to close and furlough workers “because they lack parts from Mexico . . . We’ve tried to talk sense into the López Obrador administration but they’re very difficult to work with”.
Still, the USMCA held much promise, said Luis de la Calle, a former Nafta negotiator. He said the treaty could be a significant lever of development in Mexico’s poor southeast, which Mr López Obrador has vowed to revitalise.
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