Los Angeles Times

U.S. demands weigh on NAFTA talks

Sharp difference­s emerge as negotiatin­g round ends. Proposals draw warnings from Mexico and Canada.

- By Don Lee

WASHINGTON — No one spoke about walking away from the North American Free Trade Agreement, but such sharp difference­s have surfaced among negotiator­s that the U.S., Canada and Mexico agreed to a kind of timeout and are extending talks well into next year.

After wrapping up their latest and most contentiou­s round of negotiatio­ns Tuesday, top trade officials from the three nations were openly critical of each other’s positions, acknowledg­ing in a joint statement that “new proposals had created significan­t conceptual gaps” between them.

Those proposals, made by the U.S., reflect the Trump administra­tion’s determinat­ion to rewrite NAFTA in ways that it believes would reduce American trade deficits and increase job and manufactur­ing growth at home. But Canada and Mexico, as well as many American business interests, regard them as protection­ist efforts that would undermine the value of the 23-year-old pact and cause serious disruption­s to supply chains and regional economic activity.

“The agreement has become very lopsided and needs to be rebalanced,” U.S. Trade Representa­tive Robert Lighthizer said, reading a statement after the close of seven emotionall­y fraught days of meetings in Arlington, Va. “Frankly, I am surprised and disappoint­ed by the resistance to change from our negotiatin­g partners.”

Standing next to him on the stage, Canadian Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland strained to smile, then stated that the U.S. had made a “series of unconventi­onal proposals” that was threatenin­g to “turn back the clock” on 23 years of collaborat­ion under NAFTA.

Mexican Secretary of the Economy Ildefonso Guajardo, reading his own statement, said “we all have our limits,” and warned against making decisions today that will haunt them tomorrow.

After their joint appearance in Washington, Lighthizer, in a separate briefing, told reporters that there had been no discussion or decision on whether the U.S. would pull out of NAFTA. President Trump has said several times that the U.S. may need to withdraw from the agreement before it could get a good deal.

Trump, however, has not given the required six months’ notice for withdrawal. And despite the tough words from trade officials, the three parties agreed to take about a month off and resume talks Nov. 17 in Mexico for what would be the fifth round.

The three sides had previously scheduled seven rounds of negotiatio­ns before Christmas, with the aim of reaching agreement by year’s end, to avoid the complicati­ons of Mexico’s presidenti­al elections next summer. But Lighthizer said that was never a hard deadline, and that talks could continue until March.

“Sounds like they’re not ready to pull the plug yet — and that’s good news,” said William Reinsch, a veteran Washington trade specialist who is a fellow at the Stimson Center think tank.

At the same time, he and other analysts and observers of the negotiatio­ns remained pessimisti­c that those difference­s could be bridged.

“Right now, I’m giving it even odds,” said one U.S. observer familiar with the talks, referring to the possibilit­y of their collapse. Speaking on the condition of anonymity because of the sensitivit­y of the talks and his access, he noted that the U.S. had tabled several issues in this latest round where “there is no agreement and where compromise seems elusive.”

Among the most contentiou­s is a U.S. proposal allowing NAFTA to expire after five years unless all three countries agree to renew it. Canadian and Mexican officials have privately panned the so-called sunset provision, as has the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, whose leader called it a “poison pill” proposal that could undo NAFTA because it would insert uncertaint­y in a pact whose aim is partly to provide stability in commerce.

The U.S. also is seeking new rules affecting the way autos are traded among the three countries. Currently, vehicles that are manufactur­ed with at least 62.5% of contents from any combinatio­n of the three countries can be shipped from one NAFTA nation to another without paying duties. The Trump administra­tion has proposed lifting that share to 85% with a new requiremen­t that at least 50% of the content in cars be made in the U.S. for vehicles from Mexico and Canada to enter the U.S. duty-free.

Mexican officials have balked at a country-specific rule of origin, as their nation has attracted many auto parts and assembly operations in recent years that employ hundreds of thousands of workers. U.S. auto executives, meanwhile, worry that such stringent rules of origin would be a bureaucrat­ic nightmare to implement and wreck the sophistica­ted, integrated North American supply chain that has taken decades to develop.

Other thorny issues that U.S. officials also pushed across the table in the fourth round included a U.S. proposal to weaken Canada’s and Mexico’s access to U.S. government procuremen­t contracts and to eliminate a NAFTA chapter that has allowed Mexico and Canada to contest U.S. anti-dumping and government-subsidy tariff decisions by turning to a special panel of judges. The U.S. also is seeking to weaken the right of foreign investors to sue government­s where they are operating.

Trade analysts said they expected Mexican and Canadian officials to take the U.S. demands back to their government­s for consultati­on before the fifth round, when most of the American proposals may be formally rejected. That could set in motion a period of difficult talks to reach a compromise or, at worse, could open the way for Trump to withdraw from NAFTA, a threat that he has repeatedly made.

“If they react negatively [to U.S. proposals], it may be enough for the U.S. to say, ‘Enough, we’re pulling out,’ ” Reinsch said.

In Mexico and Canada, as well as the U.S., many are taking Trump’s threats seriously.

Canada and Mexico are likely to take a bigger hit than the U.S., according to a new study by ImpactEcon, a Colorado consulting firm. But the U.S. won’t be unscathed either. The report said the U.S., too, would feel a pinch in trade, investment and broader economic growth. A reversal of NAFTA, it said, would cause a loss of 256,000 low-skilled jobs in the U.S. over three to five years.

While Mexicans desperatel­y want to keep NAFTA, they are also making preparatio­ns for the possibilit­y of life without it.

Over the last year, Mexico has aggressive­ly pursued new or updated trade deals with other countries, seeking new markets for its exports and new partners for imports.

don.lee@latimes.com Twitter: @dleelatime­s Times staff writers Tracy Wilkinson in Washington and Kate Linthicum in Mexico City contribute­d to this report.

 ?? Sean Kilpatrick Associated Press ?? AMONG the U.S. proposals are rules that would affect how vehicles are traded among the countries. Above, Mexico’s economic secretary, Ildefonso Guajardo Villarreal, left, shakes hands with U.S. Trade Representa­tive Robert Lighthizer last month in...
Sean Kilpatrick Associated Press AMONG the U.S. proposals are rules that would affect how vehicles are traded among the countries. Above, Mexico’s economic secretary, Ildefonso Guajardo Villarreal, left, shakes hands with U.S. Trade Representa­tive Robert Lighthizer last month in...

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