Los Angeles Times

Trump extols trade deal as a big win; others see it as update

- By Don Lee and Jim Puzzangher­a

WASHINGTON — President Trump on Monday lauded the new trade accord with Canada and Mexico as the most important ever for the United States and “a historic win” for American farmers, manufactur­ers and autoworker­s.

Although the overhaul contains substantia­l updates to the North American Free Trade Agreement as well as potentiall­y significan­t improvemen­ts and some innovation­s, few trade experts see the newly negotiated deal as fundamenta­lly different from the original quarter-century-old pact.

Trump’s chief negotiator, Robert Lighthizer, singled out new rules for auto trade as a big win that will bring back jobs to the United States. Analysts, however, said those changes were likely to yield only marginal help for domestic carmakers and workers in the foreseeabl­e future.

“This is not a radically new thing,” said Frederick Mayer, a public policy professor at Duke University who worked on NAFTA in the early 1990s for then-Sen. Bill Bradley. “This is a sensible, reasonable adjustment, modernizat­ion, that maintains the central core of NAFTA.”

Lawmakers, businesses, labor and other groups reacted cautiously to the deal, saying they were still reviewing the 1,168-page text of the newly named U.S.-MexicoCana­da Agreement, or USMCA. The document was posted moments after the U.S. and Canada dramatical­ly announced a breakthrou­gh to beat the U.S.-imposed Sunday midnight deadline, essentiall­y salvaging the trilateral trade pact from a possible breakup.

In concluding negotiatio­ns with Canada and Mexico, Trump moved close to fulfilling a top campaign promise to redo a trade pact

that he frequently denounced as a “disaster.” Trump and the leaders of Canada and Mexico are now expected to sign the deal Nov. 30. Senior administra­tion officials expect a vote next year in Congress, where prospects for approval remain unclear.

The agreement includes a dozen new chapters, including on labor and the environmen­t, which in the original pact were mere side agreements. There are fresh or expanded sections on digital trade, financial services, state-owned enterprise­s and intellectu­al property.

Analysts noted that major portions were borrowed from or built on provisions in the Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p, the 12-nation trade pact completed by President Obama that Trump promptly killed when he became president. The U.S., Canada and Mexico were part of that Pacific Rim accord.

Lighthizer acknowledg­ed as much in a briefing with reporters Monday, joined by Trump’s son-inlaw Jared Kushner, who helped mediate the trade talks. But Lighthizer said “our agreement is substantia­lly better” than the TransPacif­ic Partnershi­p.

U.S. negotiator­s delivered some solid gains for U.S. farmers, particular­ly by prying open a little more of Canada’s tightly controlled dairy market, especially dry milk. And Canada also bent to U.S. demands for 10 years of patent exclusivit­y protection for biologic drugs, two more years than what was negotiated in the Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p. Drugmakers sought the longer exclusivit­y term, but consumer advocates argued that the extended period would hurt patients by delaying the marketing of generic drugs.

“There’s a spirited debate going on in Canada, but the overall sentiment is relief that there’s a deal to be done,” said Daniel Ujczo, an internatio­nal trade lawyer who specialize­s in CanadaU.S. affairs at the law firm Dickinson Wright.

Ujczo said the Trump administra­tion was never “red in tooth and claw” about radically transformi­ng NAFTA in the first place. That was a false narrative, he said. “The reality was they wanted to renovate the agreement.” Ujczo said the big win for Trump was political.

Yet at the Rose Garden event Monday to celebrate the new pact, Trump — whose hardball negotiatin­g tactics strained relations with the two U.S. trading partners — bristled at those who said his efforts largely amounted to an update of the existing agreement. “It’s not NAFTA redone,” he said. “It’s a brand-new deal.”

Since NAFTA took effect in 1994, trade among the three North American nations has jumped to more than $1.2 trillion. And if the new agreement is ratified, all three countries are expected to benefit from an updating of rules and procedures governing customs, border issues, digital trade and other measures cutting red tape.

“It’s significan­t and a good thing,” said William Reinsch, a veteran trade expert and senior advisor at the think tank Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies. Still, he added, “It’s not radically different.”

On some of the biggest and controvers­ial issues, the Trump administra­tion had mixed results. Some key provisions were left largely intact, including those related to government procuremen­t and a dispute-resolution mechanism.

Perhaps the single biggest and most innovative change came in auto rules, which took up the largest amount of negotiatin­g time. The auto industry welcomed a deal that included all three countries, fearing a breakup of NAFTA would devastate long-built supply chains that cut across borders. Trump had threatened to proceed with Mexico alone if an agreement with Canada could not be reached by Sunday.

The provision requiring 75% of a vehicle’s content be produced in North America to qualify for tariff-free trade — up from 62.5% — and a new requiremen­t that 40% to 45% of a vehicle’s content must be produced by workers making at least $16 an hour are likely to help lure auto manufactur­ing to the U.S.

But the deal is unlikely to lead to a significan­t boost for U.S. automaker factories, said Kristin Dziczek, vice president of industry, labor and economics at the Center for Automotive Research, a nonprofit research group.

“I don’t see a lot of investment or jobs coming back here as a result,” Dziczek said. “On the margins, you’ll see some.”

She added that U.S. auto sales have been declining since hitting a record 17.55 million in 2016, so the industry has excess manufactur­ing capacity here.

Many automakers have moved production to Mexico, which will feel the biggest effect from the new auto rules. Still, Luis Videgaray, Mexico’s secretary of foreign affairs, expressed satisfacti­on with the overall deal.

“This is good news for Mexico,” he said Monday in a radio interview. “It gives certainty to the Mexican economy, and to commerce and investment, and maintains the integrity of what should be the most competitiv­e region of the world.”

The Trump administra­tion’s focus on autos was in part to address the flight of jobs to Mexico but also the president’s repeated complaints about the U.S. trade deficit with Mexico and other countries. Auto trade accounts for the bulk of the deficit.

Experts doubt the new auto rules and the revised trade pact overall will have a significan­t bearing on the trade balance.

After the three leaders sign the deal at the end of November, an independen­t economic assessment needs to be issued before the agreement can be taken to Congress for a vote. Analysts expect that will happen in the spring.

Trump said “there should be no trouble” getting the deal approved by Congress, but added that there could be problems if Democrats gain control of the House or the Senate in the November elections. “I think it’ll pass easily, really easily, because it’s a great deal,” he said.

But the politics of trade are complicate­d and cut across party lines. Key Republican­s expressed optimism even as they acknowledg­ed they still needed to analyze the details. Rep. Kevin Brady (R-Texas) said a modernized NAFTA “can be a big win for America’s workers, farmers and ranchers.”

Democrats were more circumspec­t. House Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-San Francisco) promised that members of her party “will closely scrutinize” the deal’s text and will judge it “by whether it improves the wages, working conditions and well-being of America’s workers and farmers.”

Lighthizer consulted closely with both parties during the yearlong negotiatio­ns and said Monday that he believed the deal would get significan­t support. Many congressio­nal Democrats have been critical of NAFTA, blaming it for spurring offshoring of jobs to Mexico, with its low wages and poor labor rights.

The labor provisions in the new agreement — including some to bolster workers’ organizing rights in Mexico — “are more progressiv­e than ever negotiated by anybody else,” Lighthizer said.

Analysts agreed that the labor chapter in the new agreement is stronger than those in the Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p, which many unions and labor groups panned. Still, for both labor and environmen­t standards set out in the new accord, labor unions and other groups said it was unclear whether the provisions had strong enforcemen­t rules tied to them.

“Added protection­s for working people and some reductions in special privileges for global companies is a good start, but we still don’t know whether this new deal will reverse the outsourcin­g incentives present in the original NAFTA,” Richard Trumka, president of the AFL-CIO, said in a statement. “It also is critical that we see what final labor enforcemen­t, auto rules of origin and government purchasing provisions will look like.”

don.lee@latimes.com jim.puzzangher­a @latimes.com Times staff writer Patrick J. McDonnell in Mexico City and Sarah D. Wire in Washington contribute­d to this report.

 ?? Chip Somodevill­a Getty Images ?? PRESIDENT TRUMP, at a news conference, bristled at those who said the deal largely amounted to an update. “It’s not NAFTA redone. It’s a brand-new deal.”
Chip Somodevill­a Getty Images PRESIDENT TRUMP, at a news conference, bristled at those who said the deal largely amounted to an update. “It’s not NAFTA redone. It’s a brand-new deal.”

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