The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Trump’s ‘historic’ trade deal doesn’t look so historic after all

- Catherine Rampell Catherine Rampell Columnist

Well, that was unnecessar­ily painful.

After spending a year and a half alienating our friends, punishing our farmers and manufactur­ers with devastatin­g tariffs and counter-tariffs, and fracturing the hard-won alliance we had built to isolate and pressure China, we finally got a new trade deal — and a “new” trade strategy.

Yet somehow, they look an awful lot like the old ones.

On Sunday evening, news broke that Canada agreed to the terms of a renegotiat­ed North American Free Trade Agreement. Not merely renegotiat­ed: rebranded! What was once the easily pronouncea­ble “NAFTA” will hereafter be the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement, or “USMCA.”

Why the name change was needed is a little unclear. Our marketer in chief clearly loves rebranding things, and USMCA, while it doesn’t exactly roll off the tongue, does have the virtue of literally putting America first.

As to the substance, well, the best you can say is it could have been a whole lot worse. President Trump didn’t, as he threatened, blow up the system. So, you know, whoop de doo. There are some new protection­ist measures, such as complicate­d new requiremen­ts for auto rules of origin, which could potentiall­y backfire. That is, they may end up being so costly to adhere to that they’ll encourage manufactur­ers to move more of their operations and jobs outside of North America.

Other stuff, such as a “sunset” provision requiring members to regularly reaffirm their desire to continue the three-party deal, is probably also not an improvemen­t. There are better ways to encourage ongoing modernizat­ion of the deal that would involve less policy uncertaint­y for businesses. But, again, this section is not as bad as many businesses and trade experts feared.

Trump also won some modest concession­s in tiny industries he’s weirdly obsessed with, such as Canadian dairy. He has convenient­ly played down the concession­s he made in exchange: In return for greater American access to the Canadian dairy, poultry and egg markets, we gave Canada greater access to U.S. markets for dairy, peanuts, processed peanut products, sugar and sugar-containing products.

But for the most part, despite Trump’s assertion that “it’s not NAFTA redone, it’s a brand-new deal,” the president mostly kept NAFTA intact.

What’s more, some of the more significan­t changes — relating to issues such as labor standards, environmen­tal protection­s and e-commerce — appear to be cribbed from another trade deal that Trump has demonized: the Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p.

If you (like me) supported TPP, this is either reassuring or supremely frustratin­g.

One of Trump’s first orders of business as president, of course, was to pull out of TPP. He soon thereafter picked unnecessar­y trade fights with TPP countries we’d previously tried to make common cause with.

Despite how Trump characteri­zes his “historic transactio­n,” the USMCA is mostly just a smooshing together of two trade deals that he derided as the worst trade deals ever made, as Dartmouth Tuck School of Business professor Emily Blanchard points out.

Trump has wrought a lot of destructio­n in service of landing us in roughly the same position we would have been in had we simply stayed in TPP and pursued more amicable negotiatio­ns with Mexico and Canada on other outstandin­g issues.

Some of these harms — such as the steel and aluminum tariffs and retaliator­y measures that, despite Sunday’s announceme­nt, remain on the books — may yet be reversible.

But the damage to our reputation as a reliable trading partner and ally may be irreparabl­e. To Trump, that may be a feature, not a bug.

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