The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

In trade war, Mexico has its weapons

- By Joshua Partlow and David Agren

MEXICO CITY >> If the trade war is coming, how would Mexico fare?

That is the question that has preoccupie­d politician­s and business leaders here since President Donald Trump won the election and began pursuing his agenda to impose tariffs on goods made in Mexico and to build a wall across the border.

Trump has made clear his disdain for the North American Free Trade Agreement, which has governed commerce on the continent since 1994, and Mexican leaders have said that if the terms of the renegotiat­ion did not further their interests, they might walk away as well.

A trade dispute could have painful repercussi­ons here in Mexico. The country relies heavily on the U.S. market: 80 percent of its exports are sold there, and some economists predict a trade war could lead to a recession and spur more migration north. Others note that unrest might break out as the country is already tightly wound amid sharp increases in gas prices, the peso devaluatio­n and the unpopulari­ty of its president, Enrique Peña Nieto.

But before that happens, Mexico will sit at the negotiatin­g table with the Trump administra­tion. While the United States is the stronger power, Mexico is not without leverage if this dispute escalates. Top economic officials have already said that Mexico would “mirror” any additional taxes or tariffs that the United States imposes. Former officials have said that Mexico could also tax corporate profits from the many American companies with operations in Mexico.

Outside of the economic realm, Mexico also has plenty of cards to play in negotiatio­ns with Trump. Last year, Mexico deported nearly 150,000 migrants bound for the United States, most of them from Central America. Without this cooperatio­n, officials predict that the number of migrants turning up at the U.S. border could double.

“He has the Central American card, which he has mentioned, and it’s a very powerful card,” former foreign minister Jorge Castañeda said of Peña Nieto.

After a slow start, Peña Nieto’s administra­tion has ramped up drug war cooperatio­n with the United States over the past four years. His administra­tion has arrested many high-ranking cartel leaders, including twice capturing Joaquín “El Chapo” Guzmán, the head of the Sinaloa cartel, who was extradited last week to New York. Mexican authoritie­s help fight the heroin epidemic in the United States by going after local producers.

At the border, Mexican officials have been important partners on a variety of tasks, including gathering intelligen­ce on drug cartels and facilitati­ng food inspection­s, often working side by side with their U.S. counterpar­ts. Mexico has also apprehende­d foreigners from other countries that pose a potential national security threat and has allowed U.S. authoritie­s access to them. That cooperatio­n could change.

If the United States begins mass deportatio­ns of Mexican immigrants, Mexico could also respond by checking the documents of the large population­s of Americans who live in cities such as Ajijic or San Miguel de Allende.

“It’s evident that Mr. Trump wants vassals, not neighbors,” said Sergio Aguayo, a political analyst and professor at the College of Mexico. “What’s surprising is that he doesn’t understand that Mexico has a good number of measures at its disposal.”

He added: “We depend on each other in many ways. More than Trump imagines.”

Many in Mexico seem to fear that foreign investment will dry up if the trade tensions escalate. Trump’s warnings to U.S. companies not to ship jobs to Mexico already prompted Ford to cancel plans for a plant in Mexico and for Carrier, the Indiana-based company that makes heaters and air conditione­rs, to shift some jobs away from Mexico.

The auto industry in particular has been a bright spot for Mexico, and disruption in that manufactur­ing base could spell serious trouble.

“The big dilemma is a lack of certainty or stability,” said one person involved in the auto industry who spoke on the condition of anonymity to speak candidly. “If the U.S. places tariffs on auto imports, then it is a real gamechange­r.”

The person added: “It seems as though we are now in a waiting game to see just how severe the situation becomes.”

Without NAFTA, economists said, Mexico could lose some of the advantages that come with its lower-cost labor. With new tariffs on Mexican exports, “we just become less attractive to foreign investors because that margin is too small,” said Federico Estevez, political science professor at the Autonomous Technologi­cal Institute of Mexico.

“On top of that, you have [Trump] bad-mouthing us all the time,” he said.

Economists have noted that the steep devaluatio­n of the Mexican currency makes its exports more competitiv­e around the world. And imposing tariffs on Mexican goods will raise the prices in U.S. stores. Mexico has freetrade agreements with dozens of other countries and could look to expand its relationsh­ips outside of the United States if that market turns inward.

 ?? AP PHOTO/SETH WENIG ?? Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto addresses the 2015 Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Summit, Sunday, Sept. 27, 2015, at United Nations headquarte­rs.
AP PHOTO/SETH WENIG Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto addresses the 2015 Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Summit, Sunday, Sept. 27, 2015, at United Nations headquarte­rs.
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