USA TODAY US Edition

Trump spells out demands for NAFTA

President wants ‘a fairer deal’ to address ‘trade imbalances’

- Roger Yu @ByRogerYu USA TODAY

President Trump laid out his demands Monday for a new North American Free Trade Agreement, setting the stage for rounds of negotiatio­ns among U.S., Canadian and Mexican officials to overhaul the landmark treaty that dictates the nations’ cross-border commerce.

The administra­tion’s agenda was required to be sent by U.S. Trade Representa­tive Robert Lighthizer to Congress at least 30 days before negotiatio­ns began.

NAFTA, drafted in 1994 and signed by the Clinton administra­tion, created a free-trade zone in North America by eliminatin­g most tariffs and encouragin­g the unimpeded flow of products that many economists say has benefited its member nations. Dismantlin­g it would lead to lost business opportunit­ies and massive operationa­l disruption for American companies, its proponents say.

Trump and other global trade skeptics, including many labor unions, say it has led to hemorrhagi­ng of domestic manufactur­ing jobs and depressed wages.

“The new NAFTA must continue to break down barriers to American exports,” according to a summary of Trump’s agenda posted on the USTR’s website. “This include the eliminatio­n of unfair subsidies, market-disorienti­ng practices by state-owned enterprise­s and burdensome restrictio­ns of intellectu­al property.

The new NAFTA will be modernized to reflect 21st-century standards and will reflect a fairer deal, addressing America’s persistent trade imbalances in North America.”

The summary of Trump’s demands reflects the change in his tone, said Gary Clyde Hufbauer, a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for Internatio­nal Economics. “The tone of this is much more conducive to negotiatio­ns than the kind of things he threw out during the campaign. His hard-line demands are consistent with the objectives. But he’s not beating the drum,” he said.

Among key demands: Update rules of origin. Trump believes these rules cause too many parts from non-NAFTA countries — used in goods assembled in the NAFTA region — to come into the U.S. tax-free.

Companies that make goods with certain percentage­s of components (parts and labor) bought in the NAFTA region can sell them in the NAFTA countries without paying a border tax.

The rules should be updated to “incentiviz­e the sourcing of goods and materials from the United States and North America,” the agenda said. Doing business with gov

ernments. Trump wants the U.S. government to preferably buy from American suppliers. But he also wants to “increase opportunit­ies for U.S. firms to sell U.S. products and services into the NAFTA countries” by establishi­ng fair and transparen­t rules in government. “It’s completely contradict­ory,” Hufbauer said.

Trade remedies. The administra­tion wants to preserve the ability of the U.S. to enforce its trade laws, including antidumpin­g laws. It also wants to eliminate a current NAFTA dispute settlement mechanism that allows an independen­t panel with members from both countries to settle cases. This is “the toughest section” of Trump’s demands, Hufbauer said.

 ?? JESUS ALCAZAR, AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? People work at a maquilador­a, or cross-border plant, in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico.
JESUS ALCAZAR, AFP/GETTY IMAGES People work at a maquilador­a, or cross-border plant, in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico.

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