The Mercury News Weekend

Report: Plan would have limited but positive impact on economy

- By David J. Lynch

“This report confirms what has been clear since this deal was announced — Donald Trump’s NAFTA represents at best a minor update to NAFTA, which will offer only limited benefits to U.S. workers.” — Sen. Ron Wyden, D- Ore.

Pre sident Dona ld Trump’s new North American trade deal would have a marginal effect on the nearly $ 21 trillion U. S. economy, boosting output by just 0.35 percent and delivering an even smaller gain to the labor market, according to an independen­t analysis by the Internatio­nal Trade Commission.

In a 379-page report released Thursday, the ITC said the agreement would “have a positive impact” on manufactur­ing and services industries.

Notably, it would increase auto parts production and employment, which are key administra­tion goals.

But the narrow benefits for the auto sector would come at the expense of the broader economy, making overall U.S. production more expensive, reducing exports and denting wages and employment, the report said.

Congress required the assessment, which was delayed five weeks by the partial government shutdown, before lawmakers hold an up- or- down vote on the U.S.-Mexico- Canada Agreement.

“I don’t see it as providing much ammunition to either side. The skeptics will still be skeptical, and the advocates will still be advocating,” said William Reinsch, a trade expert at the Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies.

Administra­tion of ficials are pushing for quick congressio­nal action, but most trade analysts expect the process to drag on for months. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi has said tougher enforcemen­t measures need to be written into the deal to make sure that Mexico complies with promised labor reforms.

Several prominent lawmakers, including Sen. Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, insist the president must remove tariffs on steel and aluminum imports from Mexico and Canada before a vote. Both countries have imposed retaliator­y measures that have damaged U.S. exports, especially from farm states.

Administra­tion officials said last year that the tariffs would be eliminated once the three countries reached a new trade deal. But instead, they have remained in place while the U.S. tries to get Mexico and Canada to accept quotas on their shipments of industrial metals.

“This report confirms what has been clear since this deal was announced — Donald Trump’s NAFTA represents at best a minor update to NAFTA, which will offer only limited benefits to U. S. workers,’ said Sen. Ron Wyden, D- Oregon, the committee’s ranking member.

The USMCA would allow the free flow of data among the three trading partners, an important step for banks, airlines, online retailers and entertainm­ent companies.

It would limit a procedure for companies to settle disputes with the three government­s, which the report says will discourage U. S. investment in Mexico and boost capital spending in U.S. manufactur­ing and mining.

An overhaul of the 25-year- old North American Free Trade Deal, the changes in the new USMCA are less sweeping than the broad eliminatio­n of virtually all trade barriers in the earlier accord, economists say.

NAFTA was expected to increase the size of the U.S. economy by just 0.5 percent and boost employment by less than 1 percent, according to the ITC’s 1993 study.

Those effects exceeded what’s likely from the new deal, including an employment gain of 176,000 jobs, or 0.12%, according to the ITC.

“Most trade deals don’t have an outsized effect on growth over the long term,” said David Page, senior economist for AXA Investment Managers in London. “It does tend to be a little bit peripheral.”

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