Toronto Star

Trump seeks trade win by helping Mexican workers get a raise

- GREG QUINN AND ERIC MARTIN BLOOMBERG

President Donald Trump has gone after Mexicans for stealing U.S. jobs. Now he’s trying to arrange a pay raise for workers south of the border.

It would be in America’s interest. Trump wants to stop U.S. companies from moving to Mexico, where workers earn a quarter of what U.S. counterpar­ts make. Closing that gap might convince American firms to stay, which is why U.S. negotiator­s will push for higher wages and better conditions for Mexican workers when negotiatio­ns on revising the North American Free Trade Agreement get underway Aug. 16.

With Mexican wages the lowest among the world’s more developed nations, labour reform is a juicy target to meet Trump’s demand to get a better deal for U.S. workers or walk away from the 1994 pact. While Mexican officials are willing to make some changes, jobs and wages will become a sticking point if Trump goes too far and uses the issue as a blunt tool to curb last year’s $64-billion (U.S.) trade deficit in goods. Mexico argues that its lower cost of production has competitiv­e benefits for all of North America.

The Trump administra­tion “will push hard, and I think rightly so, on labour standards,” said Gerardo Otero, a professor at Simon Fraser University, who has published more than 100 articles or books on Mexico and Latin America. “If Mexican prices increase due to wage increases, there might be a chance of closing the gap.”

NAFTA originally included a side agreement to protect workers’ rights that was never formally incorporat­ed in the deal. The Trump administra­tion said last month that bringing labour provisions into the core of the agreement is a priority. The U.S. already has a head start on the issue, with Mexico agreeing on labour reforms as part of the Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p pact, which Trump withdrew from shortly after taking office. Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross said in May the TPP shift is a good starting point for the U.S. in NAFTA talks.

“It has nothing to lose by taking TPP as a point of departure and negotiatin­g from there,” said Hugo Perezcano Diaz, former chief of trade practices at Mexico’s Economy Ministry and a deputy director at the Centre for Internatio­nal Governance Innovation in Waterloo, Ont.

While tough labour rules and talk of cutting the trade deficit could be a short-term political win for Trump, the real boost to the U.S. would be deeper changes that make all three nations more competitiv­e, he said.

The NAFTA treaty covers more than $1 trillion of annual trade, which has more than tripled since 1993. The pressure on Mexico may also come from the Canadian corner: Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is touting “progressiv­e” free trade and named the head of a major labour group to his team of advisers.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada