Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Mexico-U.S. trade deal unlikely to boost low Mexican wages

- By Mark Stevenson

MEXICO CITY » Many in the U.S. government, and even some in Mexico, say the new trade agreement between the two countries will help increase the extremely low wages in Mexico’s auto industry.

But activists say the trade agreement won’t do that — or stop the steady flow of jobs south — until Mexico changes its labor laws and eliminates pro-company “protection contracts” that effectivel­y leave workers helpless. The agreement announced Monday includes some vague promises in that direction, but essentiall­y leaves it up to Mexico, where a web of government complicity so far has blocked progress.

Activist Pablo Medina says he and 57 fellow workers were fired from the Goodyear tire plant in San Luis Potosi on July 9 after trying to organize an independen­t union at the factory, where two years went by without employees even seeing the union that supposedly represente­d them.

Goodyear employees staged a spontaneou­s strike on April 24 after an employee passed out and broke three ribs in the heat of the vulcanizin­g department, and workers got news that the long-awaited increase to their $1.50-per hour wages would amount to only about 50 cents per day.

“The working conditions inside the Goodyear plant are very unsafe, the employee turnover is very high, and of course the wages are very low,” said Medina, who is now fighting to get his job back.

In an emailed statement, Goodyear Mexico denied the plant was unsafe, saying it is “a competitiv­e employer within the area” on wages. It said this year’s wage increase was 6 percent — which is roughly equivalent to last year’s inflation rate. It acknowledg­ed a group of employees was fired after the work stoppage, but denied there were 57.

One key reason why wages are so low — about one-tenth of wages at U.S. plants — are “protection contracts” that workers have almost never signed, voted for or even seen. Goodyear, for example, signed a labor contract with the pro-government CTM union in April 2015, months before its San Luis Potosi plant even opened or the first worker was hired.

Goodyear didn’t deny that but said the contract “complies with all Mexican labor laws and regulation­s.”

The U.S. Trade Representa­tive’s Office said in statement Monday that the deal’s insistence on enforceabl­e labor rights “represents the strongest provisions of any trade agreement.” Under the pact, “Mexico commits to specific legislativ­e actions to provide for the effective recognitio­n of the right to collective bargaining,” it added.

But Mexican Foreign Relations Secretary Luis Videgaray told The Associated Press that the agreement doesn’t oblige Mexico to do much at all, beyond implementi­ng the vaguely worded constituti­onal amendment passed last year that requires workers be consulted and consent to labor contracts. “But that requiremen­t doesn’t come from the agreement, but from the constituti­onal reform adopted last year,” Videgaray noted.

And the first draft of the law Mexico is supposed to pass under the agreement was written by Tereso Medina, the pro-government union leader who signed the protection contract at the Goodyear plant. The law hasn’t passed, but it would have given people like Medina — who also served as a ruling-party senator — a key role on a board overseeing collective bargaining.

Rep. Sander Levin, a Democrat from Michigan, said “Mexico has been very, very determined to date to essentiall­y have an industrial policy based on very, very low wages . ... Protection agreements are rampant throughout the industrial economy, there are thousands and thousands of them.”

“Unless there’s assurance that the present industrial policy and low wage structure in Mexico is effectivel­y addressed (in the new agreement) I don’t there will be very many Democrats who would vote for it, and I don’t think it will succeed,” Levin said.

The USTR hailed another “key achievemen­t” in the new accord: “To support North American jobs, the deal requires new trade rules of origin to drive higher wages by requiring that 40-45 percent of auto content be made by workers earning at least $16 USD per hour.”

That won praise even from Mexico’s leftist President-elect, Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, who will take office Dec. 1.

“We see it as a positive thing that it (the agreement) establishe­s an increase in the wages of workers in the automotive industry,” Lopez Obrador. “We have agreed with that from the start.”

But Levin said, “We’re not sure what the impact of the content rules will be.” Some reports suggest the 40-percent content rule could count engineerin­g work performed in the U.S.

“First of all, what will be considered part of the 40 percent? If it includes intellectu­al property, for example, it won’t be anywhere near 40, 45 percent” of the content by factory workers.

 ?? EDUARDO VERDUGO, FILE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Many in the U.S. government, and even some in Mexico, say the new trade agreement reached in Aug. 2018, between the two countries will help increase the extremely low wages in Mexico’s auto industry.
EDUARDO VERDUGO, FILE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Many in the U.S. government, and even some in Mexico, say the new trade agreement reached in Aug. 2018, between the two countries will help increase the extremely low wages in Mexico’s auto industry.

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