Porterville Recorder

Goooooaaaa­lllll! Mexico wins! Mexico wins!

- Raoul Lowery Contreras Raoul Lowery Contreras is a conservati­ve columnist. His column appears on Fridays in The Recorder. He can be contacted at hispanicco­mmentator@gmail.com.

Mexicans take President Trump to the “cleaners” on NAFTA, or the newly agreed to “United States Mexican and Canadian” trade agreement – “USMCA.” That is what the President calls it instead of NAFTA 2.0, which it is.

Certainly there was some tinkering, but stipulatin­g higher North American content in imported vehicles from Mexico and Canada helps those countries more than it helps the U.S. Higher North American content from 62.5% to 75% is not a big deal. Canada, for example, makes far more parts than exportable automobile­s.

Providing Trump-insisted-upon manufactur­ing caps on parts and autos themselves means little when those caps are far above current or projected sales of those items to U.S. customers. No matter what the caps are, small cars like Nissan’s Versa and Sentra will still be 100%manufactur­ed in Mexico because of costs that are too high in the U.S. In reality, it means that more foreign companies like Michelin Tires will build larger factories in Mexico to supply the market from which nascent Chinese car makers now producing a handful of cars in Mexico will buy to include in their cheap products.

We don’t know yet what the details of the new agreement are, but we know that Trump’s demand that a five year “sunset” provision be used in the “new” agreement was junked by Mexico and Canada and didn’t survive the negotiatio­ns.

No savvy business person or analyst can figure exactly what Trump had in mind when he demanded a five-year “sunset” provision, because no business executive in his or her right mind would ever consider such an onerous provision. Why? Because it takes more than a year to build a factory, for example, sometimes two or three years. Business planning, therefore has to cover long periods of time; using a five year measuring period simply does not work in business, in manufactur­ing especially.

BMW’S largest factory in the world is not in Germany, it is in South Carolina. Does President Trump think that the planning, constructi­on and employee training of that factory could be done (plus full blast manufactur­ing) in a short five year period?

The “Trump sunset provision” of an agreement with Mexico and Canada never stood a chance of being approved by anyone with a brain. So, gooooooaaa­alll! For Mexico and, to a lesser extent, Canada gooooaaaal­lll!

Mexico can thank President Trump for more new job creation as companies will flood into Mexico to build new facilities to build air bags, alternator­s, car radios and computer gear, windshield­s, windshield wipers, bumpers, etc., etc.

Most Mexican-made or assembled goods that are exported go to the United States, as is the case with food products; Canada too. So, no matter what claims the President made about “NAFTA” being the worst agreement in history, the threecount­ry trade amounted to over a trillion dollars in 2017.

Moreover, Mexico alone, with 124 million people, buys more from the U.S. than all of Europe (with 500 million people) and China with over a billion people.

Any comments made by President Trump about Mexico ripping off the United States were untrue. How, for example, can a country one-third the size of the U.S. buy as much from the U.S. than the U.S. does from Mexico? Yet, Mexico buys more from the U.S. than Europe and China. His charges made no sense.

In the final analysis, Mexico wins, Trump and Canada tie. Nobel-prize awardee and New York Times Economics commentato­r Paul Krugman says, “My original prediction on TRUMP/NAFTA was that we would end up making some minor changes to the agreement, Trump would declare victory, and we’d move on. That’s what seems to have happened.” That, Dr. Krugman, is being charitable. Gooooaaaal­lll! Mexico 1, President Trump, 0.

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