National Post

Canada, Mexico face May 1 tariff threat in push for deal

U.S. puts expiry date on exemptions TRADE

- Alexander Panetta

WA SH I NG T ON • The United States has just applied additional pressure in its rush to get a new NAFTA agreement within several weeks, establishi­ng a May 1 deadline, after which Canada and Mexico would face tariffs on steel and aluminum.

Originally, Canada and Mexico received an indefinite exemption from the tariffs with no expiry date, then numerous countries were added to the exemption list and now there’s an expiry date on the exemptions, when tariffs could snap into place.

The latest tweaks came in presidenti­al orders signed Thursday. An order on aluminum said: “The exemption afforded to ... Canada, Mexico, Australia, Argentina, South Korea, Brazil, and the member countries of the EU shall apply only ... through the close of April 30, 2018.”

Every country seeking a permanent exemption is being asked to negotiate separate arrangemen­ts with the U. S., and quotas appear to be part of the American demand. In the case of Canada and Mexico, the U. S. is explicitly tying the issue to NAFTA.

It so happens that May 1 deadline coincides roughly with the last date for finalizing a new NAFTA this year.

The Trump administra­tion fears that any further delay could i mperil an agreement, given political realities: the U. S. ratificati­on process takes months to complete, the opposition Democrats could regain control of Congress in January and a firebrand leftist is favoured to become Mexico’s president Dec. 1.

“We think there’s a practical time limit, not a contractua­l one, not a legislated one, but a practical time limit on the negotiatio­ns due to the political calendar,” Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross told a congressio­nal hearing this week.

“It’s my view that if we don’ t have a r esolution within the next month or so, very likely it’ ll be kicked over for quite a little while because of t he elec t i on cycle. Especially in Mexico, where, as you know, there is one candidate who is running on a quite anti- American platform.”

There has been major movement at the NAFTA table lately.

On an issue seen as arguably the No. 1 American negotiatin­g objective, auto manufactur­ing, the U. S. has essentiall­y dropped a controvers­ial proposal deemed a non-starter by Canada and Mexico. The U.S. has proposed a more flexible formula for ensuring production in the U.S., rather than a hard rule demanding 50 per cent of every car to have American content.

The Canadian government is buoyed by other recent developmen­ts in Canada-U. S. trade: this week Boeing has dropped its legal fight against Bombardier and there are indication­s of a potential settlement in a dispute over glossy paper.

Now the U. S. is making a threat: Without a new NAFTA, there could be tariffs.

“I can assure you, if we don’t get a better deal within the context of NAFTA from Canada and Mexico and refigure this, we’re going to have something happen,” White House trade adviser Peter Navarro told CNN this week.

He said every country will have to agree to caps on steel and aluminum exports to the U. S. The Trump administra­tion is concerned that a glut of Chinese steel will be dumped into countries that have an exemption, then squeeze into the U.S. market.

That’s why it’s seeking quotas on exports.

“Every country that is not facing tariffs that we’re going to negotiate with will face quotas, so that we protect our aluminum and steel industries,” Navarro said.

 ?? JUDI BOTTONI / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? The Trump administra­tion fears delay could allow political factors to derail a trade deal with Canada and Mexico.
JUDI BOTTONI / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES The Trump administra­tion fears delay could allow political factors to derail a trade deal with Canada and Mexico.

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