Albuquerque Journal

U.S. industries ramp up their defense of NAFTA

- Jerry Pacheco Jerry Pacheco is the executive director of the Internatio­nal Business Accelerato­r, a nonprofit trade counseling program of the New Mexico Small Business Developmen­t Centers Network. He can be reached at 575-589-2200 or at jerry@nmiba. com.

Agricultur­e, automobile­s and railroads.

These iconic industries have played a major part in making the U.S. a global, economic superpower. Each of these sectors is carefully following the North American Free Trade Agreement renegotiat­ions that just completed a sixth round in Toronto, Canada, and each has become more and more vocal about the value of NAFTA to their future welfare.

NAFTA was designed to reduce tariffs on products traded among the three North American neighbors, and to enact provisions such as requiring a certain percentage of North American content in products traded in North America in order for them to enjoy lower or zero tariffs.

From a trade standpoint, NAFTA has been successful. Since it was implemente­d in 1994, NAFTA has helped increase trade between Canada, the U.S., and Mexico from $290 billion to $1.1 trillion in 2016. Agricultur­e and automotive are two sectors that have been instrument­al in driving the increase.

In late December, governors from the states of Iowa, Arkansas, Michigan and Tennessee traveled to Washington, D.C., to meet with Vice President Mike Pence, Secretary of Commerce Wilbur Ross and Secretary of Agricultur­e Sonny Perdue to discuss the importance of NAFTA to their farmers. Gov. Kim Reynolds of Iowa stated, “If the U.S. chooses to pull out of NAFTA, we will be one of the first causalitie­s that would happen. We’re going to hold them accountabl­e, and we’re going to continue to have the conversati­ons that we need to. We could potentiall­y lose all of the opportunit­ies that we would see from the tax bill with the uncertaint­y that it would bring from the investment community if we withdraw from NAFTA.”

The U.S. agricultur­al sector exported approximat­ely $43 billion to its NAFTA neighbors in 2016 – a 450 percent increase since NAFTA was implemente­d. It is estimated that exiting NAFTA could cause a loss of 50,000 U.S. jobs and a $13 billion drop in GDP from decreased agricultur­al revenues. Ironically, each of the states that took the trip to Washington to lobby for NAFTA were states that President Donald Trump won in the 2016 presidenti­al election as he bashed NAFTA as the “worst agreement ever.” They are now scrambling to become an influentia­l force in attempting to preserve the agreement.

According to a November op-ed penned by Mitch Bainwol, president and CEO of the Alliance of Automobile Manufactur­ers, U.S. companies exported more than $30 billion in automotive parts to Canada and more than $29 billion to Mexico in 2015. He states that “U.S. auto manufactur­ing is an internatio­nal endeavor, with a supply chain stretching around the globe. The industry’s competitiv­eness hinges on its integrated NAFTA supply chain, through which vehicle components cross the Mexican and Canadian border dutyfree, most often by freight rail, as many as eight times in the vehicle assembly process.” Therefore, NAFTA is a critical factor in this supply chain.

According to Bainwol, “The tariff would incentiviz­e automakers to produce goods outside of North America. It would also cause automobile­s produced in Mexico and Canada to be more competitiv­e in global markets than cars produced in the United States. Under such scenarios, the U.S. would be less able to compete with Asian and European companies.”

The alliance is strongly against the Trump administra­tion’s NAFTA renegotiat­ion demands that the amount of NAFTA content in North American autos be increased from 62.5 percent to 85 percent, and a total of 50 percent of total content would have to come from U.S. companies. Bainwol points out that more than 12.2 million automobile­s were produced in the U.S. in 2016, more than 1 million more than were produced before NAFTA was enacted. Today, vehicles produced in Mexico and Canada contain much more U.S. content than those produced outside North America. If NAFTA were terminated, the result would be a 2.5 percent tariff on passenger vehicles imported from Mexico and Canada, which would result in an average extra cost of $850 per vehicle passed on to consumers.

From a logistics standpoint, railroads carry billions of dollars of supplies and finished products between the three NAFTA partners, the largest amounts concentrat­ed in the automotive, farm, and food products sectors. According to Edward Hamberger, CEO of the Associatio­n of American Railroads, NAFTA trade accounts for a large portion of all rail business. “Industry data shows that at least 42 percent of rail carloads and intermodal units, and roughly 50,000 U.S. jobs are directly associated with internatio­nal trade. We agree with economists who predict a steep decline of North American trade without NAFTA in place, a major problem for our industry, which customers rely on to traverse the northern and southern borders every day,” Union Pacific Railroad’s CEO Lance Fritz states, “While almost all observers agree that NAFTA must be modernized, it should not be abandoned altogether. The conversati­on we need to be having is how do we enhance the NAFTA trading bloc’s capability of competing globally, and specifical­ly America’s ability to compete globally.

It is still uncertain when the NAFTA renegotiat­ions will end and whether NAFTA will continue between the North American partners. However, traditiona­l American industries that are so critical to our economy are loudly raising their voices in favor of its preservati­on.

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 ?? ANDRES LEIGHTON/FOR THE JOURNAL ?? A train transports containers past the facilities of Twin Cities Services Inc. in Santa Teresa, N.M.
ANDRES LEIGHTON/FOR THE JOURNAL A train transports containers past the facilities of Twin Cities Services Inc. in Santa Teresa, N.M.
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