Orlando Sentinel

The Trump administra­tion

- By Don Lee don.lee@latimes.com

lays out objectives for NAFTA renegotiat­ions as a deadline to change the decades-old trade pact approaches.

WASHINGTON — The Trump administra­tion Monday unveiled its highly anticipate­d plans for renegotiat­ing the North American Free Trade Agreement, explicitly stating that its key objective is to reduce the trade deficit with Canada and Mexico — an aim that most economists say is misguided as the focus of a trade policy.

The release of the administra­tion’s bargaining objectives for NAFTA sets the stage for negotiator­s to begin talks as early as mid-August.

The 18-page document from the Office of the U.S. Trade Representa­tive suggests that the Trump administra­tion is seeking a comprehens­ive review and wide-ranging changes to the pact, with a new chapter on the digital economy and other provisions and rules to modernize NAFTA.

Much of the negotiatin­g objectives are vaguely stated, likely reflecting the administra­tion’s reluctance to make commitment­s that at this stage could make things more difficult politicall­y and at the bargaining table.

The blueprint contained none of the harsh language or threats to pull out of NAFTA that marked President Donald Trump’s rhetoric during the campaign and into his presidency. Trump has repeatedly stated that he would terminate the agreement if it could not be significan­tly improved in favor of American interests.

In its NAFTA negotiatin­g road map, the administra­tion made clear it wanted to strengthen trade remedies to secure fairer and what it called “reciprocal” trade. The USTR said it would seek to eliminate a chapter in NAFTA that allows Canada and Mexico to challenge U.S. anti-dumping duties by turning to an independen­t panel of arbiters.

The Trump administra­tion also said it planned to set up an “appropriat­e mechanism” to ensure countries avoid manipulati­ng their exchange rate to gain an advantage on trade.

But the USTR largely papered over other contentiou­s issues. For example, it indicated that the U.S. would seek to “update and strengthen” so-called rules of origin, which essentiall­y sets a limit on the value of non-North American-made components that can go into goods and receive NAFTA’s duty-free treatment. But no quantitati­ve target was specified, nor was there even a statement saying that U.S. negotiator­s would be looking to raise the local-content minimum.

On labor, the USTR said it would require NAFTA countries to adopt internatio­nally accepted standards that call for the right to organize and abolish compulsory labor, as well as setting “acceptable” pay and work conditions, something many labor advocates have wanted, especially for Mexico.

“But what’s missing is the assurance of steps that must be taken for the rights to be real,” said Rep. Sandy Levin, D-Mich., the former ranking member of the House Ways and Means Committee.

Levin’s concerns were echoed by civil society groups and other Democratic lawmakers on other matters as well, including environmen­tal rules and “Buy America” procuremen­t policies.

“The document is quite vague, so while negotiatio­ns can start in 30 days, it’s unclear what will be demanded on key issues, whether improvemen­ts for working people could be in the offing or whether the worst aspects of the (TransPacif­ic Partnershi­p) will be added, making NAFTA yet more damaging for working people,” said Lori Wallach, director of Public Citizen’s Global Trade Watch.

The early criticisms of the USTR objectives point to the political battle ahead as Trump seeks to overhaul not only NAFTA but U.S. trade policy more generally.

The U.S. Chamber of Commerce issued a short statement after the release of the objectives, neither endorsing nor criticizin­g the overall plan. Many businesses have been worried about the possibilit­y that Trump’s strident position on trade could lead to significan­t changes or even a dismantlin­g of NAFTA that could undermine the gains over the past 23 years, and the sophistica­ted supply chains and operations that connect the three countries economical­ly.

“We commend the administra­tion’s recognitio­n that we must do no harm to the American jobs, businesses, and industries that depend on trade with Canada and Mexico,” the chamber said.

Canada and Mexico are the United States’ second and third top trading partners after China. Total U.S. trade — imports and exports — with Canada and Mexico has tripled from 1993, to $1.2 trillion in 2016.

But the U.S. trade deficit has increased significan­tly with Mexico over the last two decades. And with American manufactur­ers continuing to relocate there, Trump has seldom passed up the opportunit­y to trash NAFTA, repeatedly calling it a “disaster” and earlier this year saying he was close to withdrawin­g from the agreement.

Trump in particular has focused on the U.S. trade deficit with Mexico, which totaled $64 billion last year. The U.S. has trade deficits with practicall­y every major country, and the president has made lowering and eliminatin­g trade deficits his primary economic focus.

In a nod to Trump’s emphasis on that, the USTR said in releasing its objectives that this is the first time that it has included deficit reduction as a specific aim for NAFTA renegotiat­ions. Most economists, however, say that the trade deficit reflects broader economic imbalances, specifical­ly the gap between U.S. investment and savings and that reducing the deficit may do little to bring back jobs to the U.S.

Trump is looking to renegotiat­e other trade agreements as well. Earlier this month, Robert Lighthizer, Trump’s U.S. Trade Representa­tive, took the first step toward making changes in the free trade pact with South Korea, saying that the five-year-old deal hasn’t turned out well for the U.S.

 ?? ALEX BRANDON/AP ?? President Trump’s administra­tion on Monday released a plan for renegotiat­ing NAFTA with Canada and Mexico.
ALEX BRANDON/AP President Trump’s administra­tion on Monday released a plan for renegotiat­ing NAFTA with Canada and Mexico.

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