Times Colonist

NAFTA further in peril over U.S. order for stringent American auto content

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OTTAWA — Pessimism about the fate of NAFTA is mounting amid dismay that the U.S. wants to impose stringent new American content requiremen­ts on vehicles that are allowed duty-free movement across North America.

The United States is set to propose that cars and trucks must have at least 85 per cent North American content and at least 50 per cent specifical­ly American content to qualify for duty-free status, according to a report by Inside U.S. Trade.

The rules of origin proposal is expected to be tabled next week in Washington during the fourth round of negotiatio­ns to rewrite the North American Free Trade Agreement.

Canada and Mexico have, from the outset of talks, been adamant that they won’t agree to a specific American content requiremen­t that would bolster the U.S. industry at the expense of automobile and auto parts manufactur­ers in the other two countries.

And Canada’s automotive industry agrees. “You can’t have protection­ism within a free-trade agreement. It’s an oxymoron,” Flavio Volpe, president of the Automotive Parts Manufactur­ers Associatio­n, said Friday.

Studies have found that Canadianpr­oduced vehicles already contain 63 per cent American content, while those produced in Mexico contain 40 per cent, Volpe noted. But he said casting an American content requiremen­t in stone would handcuff the industry’s ability to pivot to suppliers in other countries — including Canada and Mexico — should they be able to offer a better product at a better price.

“If the U.S. becomes less competitiv­e and you’re tied to doing it in the U.S., then you are less competitiv­e,” Volpe said, adding that in the meantime the industry’s global competitor­s, such as China, will be “eating your lunch.”

Even without a specific American content requiremen­t, the reported proposal to hike the North American content requiremen­t to 85 per cent — up from the current 62.5 per cent — is stoking fears in all three countries that their fully integrated supply chain would be disrupted, manufactur­ing costs would skyrocket and the North American automotive industry would be left unable to compete with automakers in Europe and Asia.

“We are such a highly integrated industry … and it would really tend to undermine our competitiv­eness,” said Mark Nantais, president of the Canadian Vehicle Manufactur­ers Associatio­n.

Matt Blunt, president of the American Automotive Policy Council and former Missouri governor, echoed that concern.

“We share the goals of the [Trump] administra­tion to strengthen the U.S. manufactur­ing sector, grow the U.S. economy and American jobs,” he said in an email statement to The Canadian Press.

“We, however, are concerned the approach they are taking would be counterpro­ductive to achieving those shared goals, including significan­t changes to rules of origin that would be harmful to the short and long-term competitiv­eness.”

Unifor president Jerry Dias, whose union represents Canadian autoworker­s, said he sympathize­s with what the U.S. is trying to do: stop the exodus of manufactur­ing jobs, particular­ly in the auto industry, to low-wage Mexico.

But he said imposing stringent North American and American content requiremen­ts, without simultaneo­usly raising the 2.5 per cent tariff on vehicles imported to the U.S. outside NAFTA, would backfire. He predicted automakers would forgo their duty-free status under NAFTA, move their operations to Mexico and pay the tariff.

“Ultimately, unless they deal with the 2.5 per cent tariff, it’s all worthless.”

As for a specific American content requiremen­t, Dias said that simply “won’t fly.”

“For the U.S. to think that Canada is somehow just going to be bullied and is going to roll over and not protect their key industries while the U.S. is trying to do the same makes no sense,” he said, noting that autos remain Canada’s top export.

The protection­ist line on auto rules of origin comes after the U.S. tabled an equally unpalatabl­e proposal on government procuremen­t at the third round of negotiatio­ns last week in Ottawa. The U.S. is looking to severely restrict the ability of Canadian and Mexican companies to win contracts on government­funded infrastruc­ture projects in the U.S.

A senior Canadian government official, not authorized to speak publicly on the matter, said Canadian negotiator­s will keep meeting and talking, even if it means repeatedly rejecting hardline American proposals.

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