Waterloo Region Record

A NAFTA breakthrou­gh ‘in next little bit’?

Top U.S. trade official says he’s optimistic as all sides race against the clock

- ALEXANDER PANETTA

WASHINGTON — The top U.S. trade official says he’s optimistic a NAFTA agreement can be reached soon, with all sides racing against the clock to complete negotiatio­ns before political uncertaint­ies set in this spring.

The calendar means that a deal must be completed by June to allow ratificati­on votes in 2018 — before the current Mexican government leaves office, and before the mid-terms potentiall­y reconfigur­e the U.S. Congress.

The Donald Trump administra­tion fears a failure to obtain an agreement within several weeks would mean talks would drag into 2019 and into a more uncertain political environmen­t.

“I’m hopeful (of a deal soon). I think we are making progress. All three parties want to move forward,” U.S. trade representa­tive Robert Lighthizer told CNBC on Wednesday.

“If there’s a real effort made to try to close out and to compromise and to do some of the things we all know we should do, I’m optimistic we can get something done, in principle, in the next little bit.”

The Canadian side isn’t quite as bullish on prospects for an immediate deal: “(It would be) a bit of a challenge,” Canada’s chief negotiator, Steve Verheul, said before a meeting with union officials in Ottawa.

“We’ve got quite a bit of work to do yet, actually.”

The countries are still said to be far apart on key irritants like dairy, dispute-enforcemen­t mechanisms, and Buy American rules.

But the reason for the U.S. hurry is spelled out in its own domestic trade law.

The law sets 195 days for consultati­ons on a new trade agreement before lawmakers can vote. It so happens that the absolute drop-dead date for starting that 195-day clock, before a new Congress takes office on Jan. 3, 2019, is June 21 — the first day of summer.

One trade expert says the practical deadline is actually even earlier.

According to Dan Ujczo of the firm Dickinson Wright, the real deadline is mid-May.

That would allow time for a pause before the Mexican election July 1, leave room for procedural snags, and permit a vote before Congress leaves Washington at Christmas.

Lighthizer alluded to the political pressure: “We have a short window because of elections and things beyond our control.”

In an effort to get that deal, the U.S. appears to have backed away from one of its most contentiou­s demands and is no longer insisting 50 per cent of cars be made in the U.S., and is now floating a different formula based on autoworker salaries.

Several sources say the U.S. has shaken up the talks with a new proposal on autos.

In the early rounds, the Americans angered the other countries with a two-pronged proposal: On the one hand, drasticall­y increasing the percentage of North American parts a car must have to avoid a tariff, while on the other hand insisting that half the parts be American. Other countries called that a non-starter.

Now, according to sources familiar with the latest developmen­ts, the U.S. has offered to replace the 50-per-cent requiremen­t with another idea designed to encourage American manufactur­ing: A formula that credits car companies for paying more than $15 per hour.

That would, by definition, favour manufactur­ing in the northern part of the continent — because Mexican autoworker­s’ wages average only a few dollars per hour.

Lighthizer has also said he’s seeking policies that lift Mexican wages.

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