The Borneo Post

NAFTA win may rest on helping Mexican workers get a raise

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PRESIDENT Donald Trump has gone after Mexicans for stealing US jobs. Now he’s trying to get workers south of the border a pay raise.

It would be in America’s selfintere­st. Trump wants to stop US companies from moving to Mexico, where workers earn a quarter of what US counterpar­ts make. Closing that gap might convince American firms to stay, which is why US negotiator­s will push for higher wages and better conditions for Mexican workers when negotiatio­ns on revising the North American Free Trade Agreement get underway next week.

With Mexican wages the lowest among the world’s more developed countires, labour reform is a juicy target to meet Trump’s demand to get a better deal for US workers or walk away from the 1994 pact. While Mexican officials are willing to make some changes, jobs and wages will become a sticking point if Trump goes too far and uses the issue as a blunt tool to curb last year’s US$ 64 billion ( RM288 billion) trade deficit in goods. Mexico argues that its lower cost of production has competitiv­e benefits for all of North America.

The Trump administra­tion “will push hard, and I think rightly so, on labour standards,” said Gerardo Otero, a professor at Canada’s Simon Fraser University who has published more than 100 articles or books on Mexico and Latin America. “If Mexican prices increase due to wage increases, there might be a chance of closing the gap.”

NAFTA originally included a side agreement to protect workers’ rights that was never formally incorporat­ed in the deal.

The Trump administra­tion said last month that bringing labour provisions into the core of the agreement is a priority.

The US already has a head start on the issue, with Mexico agreeing on labor reforms as part of the Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p pact, which Trump withdrew from shortly after taking office.

Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross said in a May interview the TPP shift is a good starting point for the US in NAFTA talks.

“It has nothing to lose by taking TPP as a point of departure and negotiatin­g from there,” said Hugo Perezcano Diaz, former chief of trade practices at Mexico’s Economy Ministry and a deputy director at the Centre for Internatio­nal Governance Innovation in Waterloo, Ontario.

While tough labour rules and talk of cutting the trade deficit could be a short-term political win for Trump, the real boost to the US would be deeper changes that make all three nations more competitiv­e, he said.

The NAFTA treaty covers more than US$ 1 trillion of annual trade, which has more than tripled since 1993. Threeway talks will kick- off Aug 16 to Aug. 20 in Washington.

The pressure on Mexico may also come from the Canadian corner: Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is touting “progressiv­e” free trade and named the head of a major labour group to his team of advisers.

The three government­s have signalled a desire to finish talks before elections next year in Mexico and the US. — WPBloomber­g

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