House Democrats announced on Tuesday that it would support the passage of the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA) after the deal spent months in limbo.
And while details of the official deal are scarce, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi described the deal to replace North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) as a “victory for American workers.”
Bruce Heyman, the former U.S. ambassador to Canada from 2014 to 2017, went even further.
“It’s one of those rare circumstances we’ve seen now for the last few years, where you have a win-win-win,” Heyman said on Yahoo Finance’s On the Move. “You have a win for not only the administration, but also Congress. You have a win for American workers, farmers, and the environment. You have a win for Canada and Mexico. And so altogether, I think that this should be a day to celebrate our trading relationship.”
He added that while his preference was that the aborted Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) would have served as the replacement to NAFTA, the new deal will have a similar effect.
“Lo and behold, the president said the TPP was bad and NAFTA was bad,” Heyman said. “But what did we get? 65% to 70% of the exact language in this new USMCA is TPP. They lifted it right out of TPP. The rest is pretty much the structure of NAFTA with the exception of these auto provisions that were put in.”
‘The auto industry is facing a whole cyclical change’
On the U.S. side, the USMCA is said to provide an economic boon to the automaker industry. The American Automotive Policy Council stated that the USMCA will incentivize a $23 billion increase in U.S. annual parts and sales alone. The deal will also reportedly raise wages in Mexico.
“The auto industry is facing a whole cyclical change that is taking place after an 11-year recovery, and now moving into a whole different cycle of people’s usage of automobiles and the types of automobiles that they use,” Heyman said. “So I think it’s a bit tricky. The administration, though, definitely came in with the aim of protecting American jobs and workers. The biggest pluses that we had at the early years of NAFTA came from plants moving to Mexico at these lower labor rates.”
According to the Wall Street Journal, the USMCA will require that “a certain proportion of a car will have to be produced by workers with higher wages, and a greater proportion of components will have to originate in North America.” The production stems from Mexican workers, who will reportedly have less restrictions on forming unions and demanding fair pay.
“By increasing the hourly wage on content on American automobiles and increasing North American content of steel and aluminum and parts, it just enhances the ability for North America to compete more effectively,” Heyman said. “That all being said, the auto industry is facing so many other challenges here that might get mixed up in today’s news.”