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The NAFTA renewal game

 

E. Ablorh-Odjidja

August 28, 2018

 

How come Trump, under all these attacks, is still capable of winning on the revised NAFTA agreement with Mexico?

 

The just-completed NAFTA ( now to be known as USMCA) agreement forces us to reexamine the man and his game.

 

Remember Trump was going to build the wall. And he still claims Mexico will pay for it?

 

Mexico was hugely offended and people opined that a good relationship between the countries had been dealt a death blow.  Besides, was Mexico going to pay cash for the wall to be built?

 

Well, the wall is being built.  No hard cash was directly paid by Mexico, only if you would excuse the tariff in trade adjustment that has been made to favor the US.  But now, Mexico is an ally with Trump for this NAFTA renewal proposal.

 

Notice the game being played at this stage and you can guess the odd men out - China and Canada. 

 

The question is how difficult it will be for China and Canada to resist Trump now.  They both have their trade and tariff issues with Trump, as did Mexico before the proposal.

 

Mexico just found out that resistance with NAFTA renewal is futile, with Trump at his game.

 

You will say, China was not part of the old NAFTA, so the new arrangement will not affect her. Really?

 

Wait till the end of the game.

 

The mechanics of the game being played allows Trump the pick three conquered pieces at the end of the trade/tariff war game. In this case against Mexico, Canada and China.

 

Mexico is already a pick off the board. I predict that the next easy piece is Canada, then China follows. 

 

Canada may have gone down already. But we will still have to wait for a little while, as we do in a very fluid game.

 

But China, believe it or not, is the principal target of this particular game.  The end is to bring her to heel on tariffs.

 

Mexico and Canada are the bit pieces now, but congenitally beneficial to the US as decoys.

 

The NAFTA renewal effort, in case we have forgotten, is about tariffs; this being the key among Trump’s relational objectives on trade with the rest of the countries in the world.

 

With Mexico, building the wall is to put it on the back heel.  But there is no bigger tariff fight out there for Trump than the one with China now.

 

Trump has observed that China has been cheating the US on trade and its related tariff issues for a long time.

 

His concerns are about trade imbalances, intellectual property abuses, and forced technology transfers – all of which for decades have gone mostly to benefit China, at the expense of the US in a so-called free-trade relationship.

 

Trump wants a change in this relationship; to allow the imbalances removed to the benefit of the US. And, at least, to make it a fair and full free trade, as he calls his objective.

 

So, it is for this Trump objective that the USMCA, as a replacement for NAFTA, has been proposed at this stage of the game. 

 

With the NAFTA/Mexico overhaul part in the bag, Trump is ready to take on China.  Canada compared to China, as said, is still a bit player in this game.

 

The game is in motion and Trump is willing to play hardball with China, to force her to abandon her unfair trade practices with the US. The Mexico accomplishment gives Trump the leverage to do so.

 

The new agreement proposes:

 

“Under the new agreement, automobile companies would be required to manufacture at least three-fourths of a car’s value in North America to qualify for zero tariffs. This is a 12.5 percent increase from prevailing NAFTA rules, and renegotiated rules would require that a portion of the car must be assembled by workers earning at least $16 an hour.

 

"This is described as a concession by Mexico to avoid getting an advantage with its more frugal pay for workers,” writes Wesley Pruden of Washington Times.

 

In this agreement is the leverage against China.  Mexico and Canada are two countries that have seen rivalries with China in the “automotive parts” exports to the US market.

 

China has so far had the advantage in manufacturing cheap auto parts. This has bought her the relatively larger market share in auto part imports that she enjoys in the US.

 

The new agreement forces more manufacturing between the NAFTA/USMCA partners.  With this, China will see her market share potential in the US reduced.  It effectively places a barrier in auto trade between China and the three North American countries.

 

Canada has yet to buy into the new NAFTA/USMC arrangement, but it will be hard for her to avoid the bait. She is likely to join soon.

 

For the US a completed NAFTA/USMC overhaul will mean the following:

 

The arrangement will allow the US to reduce its trade imbalance with Mexico.  Not to mention that the amount accrued will go to pay for the new border wall, even though Mexico will refuse to admit that she is helping to pay for the wall.

 

The $16 an hour provision for workers in the auto industry in Mexico also helps the US.  It reduces differential labor costs in the US and Mexico auto industry.  Provides good pay for affected factory workers in Mexico and thus curtails the need for some Mexicans to want to migrate to the US.

 

Meanwhile, the balance in labor cost, produced by the new NAFTA/USMCA, further impacts positively the US auto manufacturing industry, since job exports to Mexico will be reduced. 

 

More auto manufacturing jobs will return to the US from places like Mexico and Canada because of near parity in labor costs.  And the US companies manufacturing parts in China will be forced by new tariff imposition to relocate their factories in North America.

 

The prevailing political wisdom before Trump, as opined by Obama, was that jobs lost to places like China “are not coming back.”   But watch how China squirms under the new tariff squeeze as the jobs start flowing back into the US.

 

Canada is not in yet.  But I believe that the new NAFTA/USMCA conditions will also put Canada on the back foot.

 

She has no choice but to join.

 

Canada will join she will not want to lose market share in the US to Mexico.  Nor would she like to miss the windfall provided by the return of manufacturing jobs to North America, caused by the push on China.

 

But just like Mexico, Canada will have to pay a little price in concessions too. She will have to lower her own astronomically high tariff on imports of US farm products.

 

Finally, China, the king piece in the game will fall.

 

The new USMCA agreement will force China to come to terms with Trump’s call for a new tariff arrangement - based on free and fair trade and at the bilateral level.  And no more open-door policies for trade tariffs that do not favor the US.  Game over. 

 

 

E. Ablorh-Odjidja, Publisher www.ghanadot.com, Washington, DC,  August 28, 2018

Permission to publish: Please feel free to publish or reproduce, with credits, unedited. If posted on a website, email a copy of the web page to publisher@ghanadot.com. Or don't publish at all.


 

 

 

 

 

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