Cape Breton Post

Tough spot

NAFTA negotiatio­ns could mark end of era for Mexican exports

- BY MARK STEVENSON

President Donald Trump’s push to renegotiat­e the North American Free Trade Agreement is putting Mexico in a tough spot, threatenin­g the system that has helped turn the country into a top exporter through low wages, lax regulation­s and proximity to the United States.

With talks set to start on Aug. 16, the Trump administra­tion is targeting the massive U.S. trade deficit with its southern neighbour and the weakly enforced labour, environmen­tal and manufactur­ing rules that for 23 years have drawn American assembly plants to Mexico and launched a flood of television­s, cars and appliances across the border.

“Mexico was resting on its merits and has been in a comfort zone, and now we have to leave it,” Economy Minister Ildefonso Guajardo told a business group recently. “The alarm clock has rung for us to wake up.”

A key draw for foreign assembly plants and investment has been Mexico’s low wages. While average manufactur­ing wages in China had risen to $3.60 per hour by 2016, Mexico’s had shrunk to $2.10 - a level some economists say is artificial­ly low. With many workers unable to afford the vehicles Mexico produces, the country exports about three times as many cars as are purchased domestical­ly, most to the United States.

“It is a very serious problem,” Alex Covarrubia­s, a labour professor at Mexico’s Sonora College, said of the country’s wage policy. “Almost all the (labour) contracts that are signed in Mexico are unlawful, which means that they are company contracts, which the workers aren’t aware of.”

The Trump administra­tion is pressing to bring labour and environmen­tal regulation­s originally contained in weakly enforced “sidebar” agreements - into the main body of NAFTA’s text, and to require that Mexico’s government ensures the “effective recognitio­n of the right to collective bargaining.”

Tightening Mexico’s labour laws and strengthen­ing unionizati­on could push wages up, or at least stem the flight of jobs to Mexico, experts say.

Guajardo said Mexico is willing to negotiate labour and environmen­tal issues as part of the talks to be held in Washington. “I think it would be progress, to guarantee that the benefits of the agreement are shared among all.”

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? Workers inspect and pack LG flat screens at an assembly plant in Reynosa, Mexico.
AP PHOTO Workers inspect and pack LG flat screens at an assembly plant in Reynosa, Mexico.

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