Los Angeles Times

Trump wants to set car production rules

He seeks to dictate how, where autos are made to be duty-free under new NAFTA.

- By Jenny Leonard

The Trump administra­tion wants to dictate how and where global auto companies make cars and parts to secure duty-free treatment under the new NAFTA — its most direct interventi­on yet to manage trade and production — according to people familiar with the effort.

The issue is being discussed among Trump administra­tion officials, congressio­nal staff, and domestic and foreign automakers in the context of the legislatio­n that lawmakers will vote on for the trade deal to take effect. The White House wants specific language that would allow it to unilateral­ly administer the production rules for companies.

The U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement, signed by Presi

dent Trump and his counterpar­ts in November 2018, is still awaiting approval from the U.S. Congress. The White House has touted the new production rules for the auto sector as one area of the deal that’s most beneficial to the U.S.

But the companies, lawmakers and even the U.S. Internatio­nal Trade Commission in an economic analysis have cautioned that the rules are so strict that they would result in higher car prices and lost sales.

The push comes amid Trump’s tariff-led assault on supply chains that run through China. It illustrate­s how much his administra­tion has drifted from Republican­s’ free-market ways and is willing to employ the sort of coercive tools used in command economies such as China to force domestic production.

It’s also happening as the president’s tariffs on steel, aluminum and imported components from China have contribute­d to a slowdown in American manufactur­ing that has begun to cause the loss of factory jobs in some politicall­y important swing states going into Trump’s 2020 reelection bid.

The negotiatio­ns over auto rules are taking place in parallel with discussion­s U.S. Trade Representa­tive Robert Lighthizer is having with House Democrats on changes the lawmakers are seeking to the new USMCA trade agreement.

Officials from Lighthizer’s office for months have been meeting with auto industry executives to talk through the companies’ transition plans. Those would allow for a grace period of as many as five years before they have to comply fully with the new rules in order to ship products across North American borders duty-free.

The agreement the three countries have signed refers to these transition plans as an “alternativ­e staging regime” that each nation can apply on a producer-by-producer basis, giving the U.S. trade representa­tive wide discretion to treat one company better than another.

People familiar with the discussion­s say the language gives the White House a chance to abuse the transition-plan approval process to pressure companies into making politicall­y expedient investment­s. To avoid an opaque process ripe for meddling by politician­s, auto companies and Congress are asking the U.S. trade representa­tive to commit to uniform rules so they can plan accordingl­y and don’t have to fear retributio­n for opening a plant in Mexico, for instance, instead of the U.S.

A spokesman for Lighthizer didn’t respond to a request for comment.

There’s precedent in the Trump administra­tion for treating one company differentl­y from another in its trade battles. Apple Inc., for example, got multiple tariff reprieves after Chief Executive Tim Cook personally asked the president to exclude some of its products from the wide-ranging duties he imposed against imports from China.

Another worry, the people said, is how the White House would treat companies participat­ing in contentiou­s litigation on California emissions rules. The industry is split on the matter, with General Motors Co., Toyota Motor Corp. and Fiat Chrysler planning to side with the Trump administra­tion over their rivals.

The car industry has been publicly supportive of USMCA and is lobbying for swift approval — mainly for the sake of much-needed certainty in an environmen­t that has been clouded by Trump’s multiple threats to withdraw from the existing NAFTA. An exit from that deal would leave more than $1 trillion in annual trade among the three countries hanging in the balance.

But compliance with USMCA is much more difficult for auto companies because of the more stringent rules that govern whether a car or auto parts qualify as made in North America and can cross borders without tariff.

Under the deal, 75% of a car has to be made in the three countries to qualify. It also needs to contain 70% of North American steel and aluminum, and 40% of a vehicle has to be made in plants with an average wage of $16 an hour or higher. The last part, in particular, is intended to shift more production and investment to the U.S. and away from Mexico.

In April, the U.S. trade representa­tive’s office tried to preempt an independen­t economic analysis of the deal by releasing its own “white paper” focused on the automotive sector.

The office said then it saw the new NAFTA leading to $34 billion in auto investment. Many of those investment­s, however, had been decided on long before the deal was finalized.

A senior official for the U.S. trade representa­tive said in April the Internatio­nal Trade Commission’s auto estimates were less positive than its own because the commission did not have access to privileged commercial informatio­n automakers had shared with the administra­tion.

The wrangling over language on the auto rules shows that even if Lighthizer and House Democrats reach an agreement on fixes to USMCA soon, the administra­tion is still facing an uphill battle in getting support for its demands in the legislatio­n going before Congress, called an implementi­ng bill.

Republican lawmakers and administra­tion officials are worried that time is running out to get the deal voted on this year, people briefed on the internal deliberati­ons said.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-San Francisco) and labor leaders have consistent­ly reiterated that the substance of the agreement is more important than when it gets done.

 ?? Nicholas Kamm AFP via Getty Images ?? PRESIDENT Trump with Trade Representa­tive Robert Lighthizer and Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin.
Nicholas Kamm AFP via Getty Images PRESIDENT Trump with Trade Representa­tive Robert Lighthizer and Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin.
 ?? Saul Loeb AFP/Getty Images ?? APPLE got reprieves from tariffs on products from China after Chief Executive Tim Cook, left, met with President Trump in March.
Saul Loeb AFP/Getty Images APPLE got reprieves from tariffs on products from China after Chief Executive Tim Cook, left, met with President Trump in March.

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