Arab Times

US lowers NAFTA key auto content demand: auto executives

Setting minimum wage thresholds could benefit US and Canada

-

MEXICO CITY/WASHINGTON, April 14, (RTRS): US trade negotiator­s have significan­tly softened their demands to increase regional automotive content under a reworked NAFTA trade pact in an effort to move more quickly towards a deal in the next few weeks, auto industry executives said on Friday.

A deal on automotive content rules would remove one of the biggest sticking points in talks to update the 24-year-old North American Free Trade Agreement.

The Trump administra­tion had initially demanded that North American-built vehicles contain 85 percent content made in NAFTA countries by value, up from the current 62.5 percent, along with half the value coming from the United States — levels that Canada, Mexico and automotive groups had said was unworkable.

But this has been cut by 10 percentage points, and the US specific percentage demand dropped, industry officials said.

“The US put on the table 75 percent instead of 85 percent for the regional content value of the vehicle and its core components,” said Eduardo Solis, head of Mexico’s AMIA automotive industry associatio­n.

“All of this is being carefully analyzed and specific questions are being asked during this round of the US negotiator­s (in charge of) rules of origin,” Solis said in a statement.

The 75 percent regional content is for major components such as engines, drivetrain­s, axles, suspension­s and body panels. Aluminum and steel would go into a bucket of other parts and materials requiring 70 percent regional content, while a third bucket of lesser parts would require 65 percent regional content.

“From the parts manufactur­er perspectiv­e this is a significan­t step in the right direction, compared to where we were,” said Ann Wilson, head of government affairs at the Motor and Equipment Manufactur­ers Associatio­n.

“But it does appear that this will creates significan­tly more paperwork for smaller suppliers to have to certify their parts,” Wilson added. “I think there’s a lot of room yet to improve this.”

Negotiator­s from the three nations were due to discuss the new US proposals at talks this week in Washington. Talks on rules of origin were due to take place on both Friday and Saturday, according to a schedule seen by Reuters.

A senior union leader who spoke to the Canadian negotiatin­g team on Friday said the talks were progressin­g slowly.

US negotiator­s had also recently floated the idea that 40 percent of automotive production must occur in areas paying wages of between $16 to $19 per hour. Some auto industry officials briefed on the US plan said the latest version would require an average wage rate of $16 an hour for a finished vehicle.

Setting minimum wage thresholds for the auto industry could benefit the United States and Canada, whose trade unions say that lower Mexican pay has prompted manufactur­ing capacity to move south of the Rio Grande.

Talks to rework NAFTA, which underpins $1.2 trillion in annual trade, began last year after President Donald Trump took office promising to abandon the 1994 agreement if it could not be reworked to better serve American interests.

“It’s coming along great,” Trump said in a meeting with legislator­s and governors when asked about the North American Free Trade Agreement. “We’re getting pretty close to a deal.”

But he added, “It could be two weeks, it could be three months, it could be five months, I don’t care.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait