NAFTA

  • United States
    NAFTA Renegotiation: Renewal or Expiration?
    Play
    This is the first session of the "The United States and World Trade: Future Directions" symposium. 
  • Trade
    International Trade Policy: A Conversation With Representative Sander Levin
    Play
    Representative Sander Levin discusses the future of U.S. international trade policy.  
  • Mexico
    It's Time to Face NAFTA’s Jobs Myth
    A third lightning round of North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) talks begins in Ottawa on September 23. Negotiators reportedly made progress during the first two go-rounds in Washington and Mexico City, reaching tentative agreements on intellectual property, e-commerce, and environmental protections, likely following the general outlines hammered out within the Transpacific Partnership agreement, or TPP. Yet the thornier issues – investor dispute settlement options, rules of origin, Buy American clauses, and importantly labor rules and wages – remain. And even as trade negotiators met in round-the clock sessions to get these initial breakthroughs, U.S. President Donald Trump revived his public existential threats, saying he will end up “probably terminating NAFTA at some point.” Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross chimed in that ending the agreement is “the right thing” to do if the United States doesn’t get what it wants by the end of the year. Trump, along with many Americans, condemns NAFTA for taking jobs. The president repeatedly asserts Mexico is “killing us on jobs and trade” and NAFTA is “a one-way highway out of the United States.” Average Americans echo these fears. In 2016 two out of three Americans believed globalization was good for the overall economy and country, but only forty percent thought it created employment and just one in three thought it protected jobs already here. NAFTA is viewed with particular skepticism, with nearly half of Americans believing the United States got a bad deal. The facts belie these perceptions. The non-partisan Congressional Research Service, reviewing dozens of studies conducted over the last twenty years, found that the trade agreement has had little to no effect on net employment in the United States. Yes, jobs were lost, as others were gained, leading to a net wash. And while these transitions are undoubtedly hard for individual workers, NAFTA-inspired job losses (leaving aside the new positions created by more trade) accounted for less than 1 percent of the nearly 18 million positions eliminated every year. These limited effects reflect the fact that even at $1.2 trillion dollars, North American trade represents just 6 percent of the U.S. economy. In the larger worry over jobs, the United States should be commiserating rather than condemning its southern neighbor. A recent International Labour Organization (ILO) report shows that Mexican workers, like their U.S. colleagues, suffered the most from Chinese competition, not each other. Over the last two decades, Mexico lost nearly 650,000 net jobs to the Asian giant, as textiles, shoes, and computer factories shuttered in the face of cheap imports or as management moved operations across the Pacific. The United States, according to estimates by scholars David Autor, David Dorn, and Gordon Hanson, lost 2.4 million jobs to China over a roughly similar period. Per capita this represents 11 of every 1,000 workers in Mexico, and 14 per 1,000 workers in the United States... View full text of article, originally published in Americas Quarterly.
  • Trade
    New Cyber Brief: What President Trump's NAFTA Priorities Get Right (and Wrong) About Digital Trade
    Anupam Chander argues that a renegotiated North American Free Trade Agreement could set the gold standard for digital free trade, an opportunity the Trump administration should not miss.
  • Digital Policy
    What the Trump Administration’s NAFTA Priorities Get Right (and Wrong) About Digital Trade
    A renegotiated North American Free Trade Agreement could set the gold standard for digital free trade, an opportunity the Trump administration should not miss.
  • NAFTA
    New Pieces on NAFTA, Mexico, and Venezuela
    The first round of NAFTA negotiations now concluded, the three nations will take a two week breather before reconvening in Mexico City on September 1. While the policy differences should be surmountable, in Why NAFTA Needs More Than a Few Tweaks for Fortune, I argue that the biggest threat to NAFTA is Trump. Thinking about the broader U.S.-Mexico relationship in the September/October 2017 issue of Foreign Affairs, The Mexican Standoff: Trump and the Art of the Workaround, I argue that despite the frequent animosity coming from the White House, Mexico has a historic opportunity to ambitiously lead its northern neighbor to a stronger North America. To do so, it needs to draw on the latent support from the farms, companies, and industries, as well as towns, cities, and states that benefit from these now indelible bilateral ties. The other overriding foreign policy challenge in the hemisphere comes from the worsening economic, political, and humanitarian catastrophe in Venezuela. In this piece for CNN, Venezuelan Sanctions Without Diplomacy Will Fail, I argue that unilateral sanctions, much less the military action President Trump has intimated, will be counterproductive to U.S. goals of regime change. Only concerted diplomacy, uniting governments in the region and around the world, can pressure those in Caracas.
  • Venezuela
    Shannon O'Neil on Bloomberg Surveillance
    Last Thursday, I had the pleasure of joining David Gura and Francine Lacqua on Bloomberg Surveillance to discuss Venezuela and Mexico. You can watch the full show here, with the Venezuela portion from 1:52:30-1:57:00 and Mexico from 1:58:30-2:04:30.
  • Trade
    Renegotiating NAFTA: Let the Games Begin
    The North American Free Trade Agreement was the first in U.S. history to slash trade barriers between a wealthy country and a much poorer one. This week, the NAFTA will mark another first when officials from Mexico, Canada, and the United States sit down in Washington to begin renegotiating the deal. The two milestones are not unconnected—NAFTA was the most controversial trade deal ever negotiated by the United States, in part because of the incentives it created for companies to relocate to Mexico to take advantage of lower wages. The success or failure of the coming negotiations will largely determine whether U.S. trade policy can find a firmer footing for the future or continue to be handcuffed by a lack of political and popular support. Here’s the challenge in a nutshell: how to take a two-decade old agreement that President Trump has called “the worst trade deal ever negotiated,” and somehow alter it sufficiently that the president becomes its champion if and when it goes to Congress for ratification. Trump has many times called himself a great negotiator, and NAFTA will be the acid test of that boast. Here are the four challenges that must be overcome for a successful NAFTA renegotiation: 1)    Putting America first: Trump’s biggest objection to NAFTA is that it was a one-sided deal, pointing to the large increase in the U.S. trade deficit with Mexico since its enactment and the loss of manufacturing jobs to Mexico. Whether the economic benefits of NAFTA to the United States have outweighed those costs—my colleagues James McBride and Mohammed Aly Sergie have a good backgrounder weighing the arguments—is beside the point. Trump needs to show that he has changed the agreement not just in ways that may benefit all three countries, but in ways that will help the United States relative to Canada and Mexico. That is a much harder task. The “America first” issues in the U.S. negotiating objectives include eliminating the special dispute settlement provisions under Chapter 19 of NAFTA, strengthening “Buy America” and other procurement rules that benefit American companies, and tightening so-called “rules of origin” to encourage sourcing in the United States and North America. Each issue is fraught for different reasons. Canada will fight to its last breath to retain the Chapter 19 rules, which allow it to challenge U.S. antidumping and countervailing duty orders before a NAFTA tribunal rather than in U.S. courts. With the ongoing fight over softwood lumber, and a new case that could block sales of Bombardier aircraft in the United States, the issue is still a vital one for Canada. Both Canada and Mexico will object to restrictions on their access to government procurement in the United States, but may be willing to live with this concession. Rules of origin—which is largely an issue for the automotive industry—is a wild card. If they are renegotiated to require more “North American” content, then Mexico will cheer; indeed, it is the U.S. car companies that would object. But if the Trump administration tries to introduce an “American” content requirement, this would clearly violate the spirit of the deal. Of course, Trump could try out a more traditional “pro-America” argument for trade—that strengthening NAFTA rules for digital commerce, for intellectual property, for labor and environmental standards, would all help U.S. companies and the workers they employ. But since the U.S. negotiating proposals on these issues are borrowed almost entirely from the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) agreement that Trump tore up on his first day in the Oval Office, this seems unlikely. 2)    Dealing without deadlines: All three countries are saying that they want to move quickly on the renegotiation to reduce uncertainty for investors in North America. The coming Mexican election next year, which could bring the populist Andrés Manuel López Obrador to power, is seen as an especially strong motivation to get the deal done early. But modern trade negotiations are difficult and complex. The TPP took nearly a decade to negotiate. The Trans-Atlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP) with Europe was supposed to be concluded last year and has barely made it past the preliminary issues. Mexico’s economy minister Ildefonso Guajardo said last week he sees a “60 percent chance” of the deal being done by the end of the year, which is another way of saying it likely won’t happen. The bigger problem for Trump is that Mexico and Canada have strong incentives to delay. The longer the talks drag out, the wearier the president is likely to become of the whole exercise, and the more likely he becomes to accept modest changes and try to call it victory. Or, more worrisome, it could force Trump to trigger the NAFTA withdrawal provisions that he came so close to invoking in April, which would be highly disruptive but would have the negotiating advantage of setting a hard, six-month deadline for the talks to succeed or fail. 3)    Holding back the wolves: American business and American farmers really like NAFTA. Except the trucking industry, which wants permission for foreign drivers to “reposition” empty trucks within the United States. And the textile industry, which wants to revisit the “tariff preference levels” agreed to under NAFTA that allow for foreign fabrics to be used in some clothing. And the California wine industry, which objects to the special treatment given to domestic wines in Canadian retail outlets. And the dairy industry, which has long chafed at Canada’s protectionist regime for milk and cheese.  In the testimony in June to the International Trade Commission, U.S. companies that were by and large supportive of NAFTA nonetheless raised dozens of issues they would like to see addressed in the negotiations. But the more issues that are thrown on to the negotiating table, the more difficult it will be to reach a deal in any sort of timely fashion. To get the agreement done, the Trump administration is going to have to get very good at saying no to a host of special interests, each of whom comes armed with influential political allies in Congress. 4)    Dealing with Democrats: Many congressional Democrats, who were frustrated with President Obama’s embrace of the TPP and Hillary Clinton’s lukewarm rejection of the deal, have been chomping at the bit to re-establish themselves as the anti-NAFTA, trade-skeptic party. Senate Democratic leader Charles Schumer (D-NY) earlier this month released the party’s “better deal” agenda, which tries to out-Trump Trump in its criticisms of U.S. trade deals. It can be said with confidence that whatever deal Trump can extract from Canada and Mexico will immediately be denounced as a sell-out and a give-away by the congressional Democrats. That will put the president is a position he would surely prefer to avoid—arguing the merits of NAFTA against vociferous opposition from Democrats, and needing pro-trade Republicans like Speaker Paul Ryan (R-WI) and House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Kevin Brady (R-TX) to carry the load for him in Congress. NAFTA was the beginning of an era, the first great experiment in freeing trade between high wage and low-wage countries. It set the basic template for many deals that followed, including the CAFTA with Central America and the Dominican Republic, and China’s entry into the World Trade Organization. None of those deals has become more popular with age. A successful renegotiation of NAFTA would be another milestone, demonstrating such deals can be living agreements that can be updated, improved, and continue to work in the interests of both wealthier and poorer countries. A failure, however, would continue to erode the already fading public confidence in trade.
  • NAFTA
    The World Next Week: August 3rd, 2017
    Podcast
    The U.S. Department of Commerce releases its international trade figures on goods and services, and presidential elections take place in Rwanda and Kenya.
  • NAFTA
    If NAFTA Ends, Ford's Move to China Will Be Just the Start
    Ford announced this week that instead of building its new Focus – the best-selling car in the world – in a new $1.6 billion dollar Mexico-based plant, it will ship cars for North American customers from China. Ford has promised that its decision won’t reduce its workforce. Yet even if that is true, American workers will lose. Today the compact Focus uses steel from Wisconsin, axles from Oregon, seatbelts from Indiana, grills from Michigan, tire pressure sensors from Tennessee, front-side shafts from North Carolina and Ohio, and the list goes on. With the shift, these raw materials, parts and components will be sourced and put together in Asia, eliminating dozens of U.S. based suppliers, and likely costing many of their employees their jobs. While assembly was scheduled to move from Michigan to Mexico, that would have ensured ongoing American employment – as over 40 percent of the value of vehicles “made in Mexico” comes from U.S. factory floors and U.S. offices. For products imported from China – as the new Ford Focus will be starting in 2019 – this number is a negligible 4 percent. Ford made the decision first and foremost for market reasons. China’s 28 million vehicle market is the largest in the world. And while U.S. demand for smaller cars has faltered, in China it is growing at a robust 4 percent annually. Already nearly half of the million Ford Focus models sold each year go to Chinese buyers. Importing vehicles isn’t an option as the United States doesn’t have a free trade agreement with China, so cars coming from abroad face a stifling 25 percent tariff. View full text of article, originally published in Americas Quarterly.
  • Mexico
    Why U.S. Tax Reform Threatens Mexico's Financial Future
    While tweets and speeches may continue to cause consternation in Mexico and Canada, the existential threat to NAFTA seems to have passed. President Donald Trump is now talking about giving “renegotiation a good, strong shot” rather than rescinding the free trade agreement entirely. On the docket will be intellectual property, labor rights, e-commerce, rules of origin and the environment – issues Canada and Mexico are happy to upgrade, the outlines already defined within the ill-fated Trans-Pacific Partnership. More contentious issues could include “Buy American” clauses, border customs processes, sanitary measures, and import licenses, as well as specific grievances around the Canadian dairy and soft lumber industries, and regarding Mexican sugar imports. The process will undoubtedly be drawn out; the negotiations won’t begin in earnest until three months after the White House informs a still-waiting Congress. But for Mexico, there is another huge challenge to its economic future: U.S. tax reform. The most obvious and widely noticed threat is a border adjustment tax (BAT). As laid out in Speaker Paul Ryan’s tax reform “blueprint,” it would charge a 20 percent levy on all goods and services brought into the United States, and exempt U.S.-made exports from being taxed at all. Its proponents claim the dollar would appreciate the 25 percent necessary to call it an economic wash; others believe Mexico and other exporting nations would suffer. This pseudo-value added tax (VAT) is looking less and less likely, as it is opposed by Wal-Mart, Target and nearly every other major retailer, as well as by oil companies, car makers and others that depend on products from elsewhere to run their factories and businesses here. Even if it passes, it will face legal challenges in the World Trade Organization (WTO) for its non-VAT qualities, in particular allowing companies to deduct wages when calculating their BAT tax burden. A corporate tax cut is more likely to succeed, and could be as damaging for Mexico. Republicans across the board have long favored a reduction, and with the U.S.' current 35 percent tax rate ranking highest among OECD nations, they have an argument for it. Ryan talks of lowering the corporate rate to 20 percent, bringing the United States in line with the United Kingdom and Luxemburg. Trump’s more drastic 15 percent proposal would put the United States in the bottom 20 percent of chargers, beating out Germany and closing in on the “corporate tax haven” of Ireland. If the U.S. rate plummets, Mexico will be forced to follow suit. View full text of article, originally published in Americas Quarterly.
  • Donald Trump
    Renegotiating NAFTA
    Podcast
    Andres Rozental and Rohinton Medhora join CFR's James M. Lindsay in examining the future of the North American Free Trade Agreement, or NAFTA.
  • China
    China Wins if NAFTA Dies
    Much is made of the perils of ending NAFTA for Mexico, and rightly so. The 23-year-old agreement has helped the nation not only boost trade but also transform its economy, moving from a commodity to an advanced manufacturing exporter. With 80 percent of its exports headed north, even the threat of change has hurt Mexico’s currency, limited its ability to attract foreign direct investment, and cut the country’s current and future economic growth. Largely overshadowed in all the tough renegotiation talk is what might happen to the U.S. companies that sell into Mexico’s $1 trillion dollar economy and to its 120 million consumers. With NAFTA’s zero tariffs and legal guarantees, the U.S.’ southern neighbor has become a top export market, buying over 15 percent of everything made in America and then sold abroad, topping $230 billion in 2016. Best known and most tweeted about are the industrial behemoths – Caterpillar, Ford, General Motors, and Medtronic – as a part of their tens of billions of dollars in market capitalization are backed by sales of machines, cars and medical equipment to Mexico. More vulnerable are thousands of small and medium-sized American businesses, which are more likely to export to Mexico than anywhere else in the world. All told, these companies big and small employ some 5 million Americans, and help support hundreds of communities across dozens of states. This could all change if NAFTA ends. Tariffs on U.S. exports would rise to an average 7 percent; on some crops and apparel fees would jump to double digits. These new charges would make corn, soy, beef, or pork from far away Argentina and Brazil more economically, not to mention politically, attractive. The tariffs would also enable EU made helicopters, generators, engines and other car parts to edge out American producers, gaining market share. All told, U.S. companies would be at a disadvantage vis-à-vis the past and vis-à-vis the 45 other nations that have free trade agreements with Mexico, and the end of NAFTA would level the playing field for those still without a preferred arrangement. By far the biggest winner will be China. Even with tariffs, Chinese goods already flood the Mexican market, selling billions in cellphones, computers, TV parts, and innumerable tchotchkes. The Asian giant has been stealing market share from U.S. makers since they entered the WTO in 2001, cutting U.S. sales to Mexico from 4 out of every 5 dollars of imports to less than 1 in 2. View full text of article, originally published in Americas Quarterly
  • United States
    U.S. Manufacturing Exports—Excluding NAFTA—Are Surprisingly Small
    Take out U.S. exports of manufactures to Canada and Mexico, and the United States manufacturing exports to the world are about 3 percent of U.S. GDP.* Non-NAFTA manufacturing imports are over 7 percent of U.S. GDP. These calculations are based on the North American Industry Classification System (NAICS) data for manufacturing trade, but exclude refined petrol. I cannot bring myself to count "product" as a manufacture. The division between the petrol and the non-petrol balance has long been central to my understanding of trade. Within NAFTA manufacturing exports and imports are roughly balanced—about 2.5 percent of GDP in both directions.** This supports Greg Ip’s view that China’s entry into the WTO—viewing WTO entry as short-hand for China’s increased integration into the global economy—in the 2000s had a materially different impact on the U.S. economy than NAFTA. By all measures, U.S. trade within NAFTA is much more balanced than U.S. trade with the world.* But the large deficit in manufactures—a deficit that increased by about a percentage point of U.S. GDP over the last three years, almost entirely because non-NAFTA manufacturing exports have fallen as a share of GDP by a percentage point over that period—highlights why working class support for trade in manufacturing-heavy communities has fallen. The winners from globalization in the U.S. are not so much those making goods to meet world demand as those selling debt (and real estate) to the world, those whose jobs are insulated from global competition and thus benefit from low-priced imports, and firms that have (often not taxed, or lightly taxed) large offshore profits. Take out NAFTA, and the number of jobs “gained” by exporting to meet the world’s demand is far smaller than the number of jobs “lost” because U.S. demand for manufacturing is being met by imports. Simple calculations suggest that closing the non-NAFTA manufacturing deficit of over 4 percent of U.S. GDP would support over 3 million more jobs in manufacturing-heavy communities (math is reviewed here, the U.S. government believes a $1 billion in goods exports supports just over 5,000 jobs) . The U.S. manufacturing trade deficit has changed the composition of U.S. employment—though right now, it likely has only a modest impact on the overall level of employment (e.g. an expansion of manufacturing jobs would mean fewer jobs in other sectors, as workers would need to be pulled into the manufacturing sector from other parts of the economy). Of course, if the U.S. closed the manufacturing deficit, its current account would need to be in (modest) surplus. The petrol side of the ledger—and the commodity side of the ledger generally—is in deficit, but only modestly so. Services generate a surplus of close to 1.5 percent of U.S. GDP. And the income on foreign direct investment covers interest payments on U.S. external debt and transfers to the world, more or less. But the resulting surplus would be modest on a global scale—somewhere between 1 and 2 percent of U.S. GDP. That is in line with the surplus China now runs, and way smaller than the surpluses of countries like Japan, Korea, the Netherlands and Germany. No matter— The numbers above can be interpreted in a lot of different ways. Trade in manufactures isn’t a huge share of the U.S. economy, so there is a limit to the number of jobs that have been lost from trade. Especially trade inside NAFTA, which is close to balanced. At the same time, the U.S. is a clear global outlier—among the major economies that is—in its low level of manufacturing exports, and its low level of extra-regional exports. Chinese exports to the U.S., Canada, Mexico, Latin America, Europe, the Middle East, and Africa are a bit over 10 percent of China’s GDP (down from a pre-crisis peak of around 20 percent of GDP). China of course has to export manufactures to pay for its imports of commodities, while the U.S. doesn’t. But even after taking into consideration the fact that U.S. success at reducing its imports of energy has reduced its need to export goods (or services) to pay for imported oil, the United States doesn’t export much. And this raises one point where I do disagree slightly with those who argue that U.S. firms ability to source globally (and especially from Mexico) has supported a significant number of “precision” manufacturing jobs in the U.S. (do follow the link to Tim Harford’s piece; I like the distinction he draws between oil, textiles, and precision manufacturing of components)—and thus that globalization hasn’t necessarily eroded the bargaining power of skilled manufacturing workers in the U.S. Conceptually that is possible—imports of Eastern European parts into Germany for example, have helped support a rise in German final auto exports. Since 2005, German jobs lost in the production of parts have been offset by the growth in other manufacturing jobs. Germany’s surplus in "machinery and transportation equipment has gone from €100 billion in 2000 (about 5 percent of GDP) to almost €250 billion in 2015 (almost 8 percent of GDP)—though German manufacturing has remained competitive because Germany’s skilled workers restrained their wage demands—see Martin Sandbu. And I wish I could convince myself that it is the case in the U.S. But even with the ability to source components from low-cost countries there just aren’t that many high-end exports of U.S. manufactures (final goods or precision components) to the world right now. Not enough, I suspect, to make up for the pressure created by imports of top-end manufactures. Especially not after the dollar’s 2014 appreciation. Put differently, I suspect that the number of global manufacturing supply chains built around producing goods outside North America to meet North American demand is much higher than the number of North American centered manufacturing supply chains that have developed to meet global demand. There is, of course, one important manufacturing supply chain in the U.S. that does primarily serve global not domestic demand: civil aviation. The U.S. is a huge net exporter of civil aircraft and civil aircraft engines (total exports of civil aircraft, parts and engines is just under 0.7 percent of U.S. GDP—and the U.S. runs a surplus here of a bit under 0.4 percent of GDP) And on a more modest scale, the U.S. is an important exporter of large industrial engines and large-scale mining equipment to the world—though this business has taken a hit after commodity prices fell. That also supports skilled manufacturing employment. But I think there are a lot more non-U.S. supply chains that ultimately rely in part on meeting U.S. (and North American) demand. Asia’s automotive supply chain—the one that supports Japanese and Korean auto exports to the U.S.—for example. As a share of each country’s GDP, Korean and Japanese auto exports to the U.S. alone are larger than total U.S. civil aviation exports to the world. Or the European automotive supply chain that supports German luxury auto exports to the U.S., the Middle East, and Asia. German auto exports to China are roughly as important to Germany’s economy as civil aircraft exports are to the U.S. (and Germany also exports civil aircraft). The NAFTA automotive supply chain is very real, but the NAFTA supply chain largely serves to meet internal NAFTA demand—not to support the export of North American made autos to the world (60 percent of U.S. auto exports go to Mexico and Canada, see exhibit 18 of the trade data—I suspect that the German transplants account for a large share of the United States’ non-NAFTA auto exports). The U.S. trade deficit in autos is almost three times as big as the U.S. surplus in civil aviation (see the data tables of the December trade release for confirmation). And of course there is the Asian electronics supply chain that provides much of the world’s telecommunications network infrastructure and most of the world’s consumer electronics. The U.S. deficit in cell phones is roughly equal in size to the U.S. surplus in civil aviation, as is the U.S. deficit in computers and computer accessories. Adding in semiconductors doesn’t change things either—the U.S. runs a small deficit there too. I have a different interpretation of the “Apple” story than most. There is no question that Apple captures the bulk of the profits (economic rents) from the sale of iPhones and the like. Apple is worth something like $700 billion and has around $200 billion in cash and securities offshore for a reason. And the iPhone includes many U.S. designed components. But almost all of the precision manufacturing of the iPhone’s components—of the chips and displays and the like—takes place in Asia, as does the final assembly. The New York Times’ reporting on Apple’s supply chain really cannot be beat (Bradsher and Duhigg highlighted the absence of U.S. made components in 2012; and Barboza followed up in 2016). Samsung and the Chinese phone manufacturers equally rely on Asian precision manufacturing for their key components. Alas, figuring out the policies that could change the incentives that have led to the U.S. deficit in manufacturing isn’t easy. The deficit doesn’t stem directly from conventional trade deals: see the numbers on NAFTA. At the same time I was never convinced that more conventional trade deals would do much to reduce the deficit in manufacturing either: look at the evolution of U.S. Korean trade in manufactures after the U.S.-Korea Free Trade Agreement (KORUS). The dollar matters of course, as do many other things (U.S. tax policy, European fiscal policy, Asian policies that impede household consumption, etc.) * I used the NAICs definition of manufacturing here, which is a bit broader than my usual "core" manufacturing measure -- which relies on the end use data for capital goods, consumer goods and autos. The NAICs data shows a $868 billion manufacturing deficit in 2016, v say $600 billion in 2010. Manufacturing exports to China and Hong Kong are 0.6 percent of U.S. GDP—or about a fifth of non-NAFTA exports. Manufacturing imports from China are 2.5 percent of U.S. GDP. More broadly, manufactured exports to Japan, China, and the NIEs (Hong Kong, Singapore, South Korea, Taiwan) are a bit over 1.3 percent of U.S. GDP, versus imports of about 3.8 percent of U.S. GDP. More on that at a later time. ** I am setting aside the debate over the United States’ $200 billion in “reexports.” That might change the balance for NAFTA (critics of the current data argue that manufacturing trade inside NAFTA only appears to balance because of reexports), but it won’t materially change the overall story. See Slate’s Jordan Weissmann for more. I should also note that in recent years the U.S.has tended to run manufacturing surpluses with Canada and manufacturing deficits with Mexico. To some significant degree this is the natural market response to the fact that Canada’s net exports of oil are rising while Mexico’s net exports of oil are falling (Mexican import of product are almost equal to Mexico’s exports of crude). Bonus graph, for those interested in the financial side of things. U.S. exports of debt to the world (excluding NAFTA partners) relative to the U.S. deficit in manufactures and the U.S. current account (both also excluding NAFTA). Exports of domestic debt are foreign purchases of U.S. Treasuries, Agencies and corporate bonds. The overall number includes U.S. net purchases and sales of foreign bonds. Recently Americans have been bringing money invested in bonds offshore back home, so looking only at foreign purchases understates net bond financing of the U.S. current account deficit.
  • NAFTA
    Trump May Threaten a Trade War Over NAFTA, but His Options Are Limited
    When then-President Bill Clinton signed the North American Free Trade Agreement in a White House ceremony in December 1993, he called it “a defining moment” for the United States and praised Mexico and Canada as “our partners in the future that we are trying to make together.” All three countries had made what then seemed like an irreversible decision to marry their economic futures. Yet today, less than a quarter-century later, those bonds are badly fraying. The new U.S. president, Donald Trump, wants to renegotiate NAFTA, which he has called “the worst trade deal in history.” Mexican President Enrique Peña Nieto has seen his approval rating fall to a paltry 12 percent as Trump has pressured American companies to stop investing in Mexico. Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, who visited the White House this week, is trying to sidestep Mexico and curry favor with Trump by talking up the balanced trading relationship between his country and the United States. The “three amigos” of North America have each retreated to their own corners, eyeing each other suspiciously. Their suspicions run deep because neither Mexico nor Canada knows quite what the new American president intends to do next. During the transition and into the early weeks of his presidency, Trump and his advisers issued all sorts of threats, from hefty across-the-board tariffs on Mexican imports to targeted border taxes aimed at American companies that build factories in Mexico and sell back into the United States. Those early flourishes, coupled with Trump’s repeated threats to force Mexico to pay for the new border wall he promised in his campaign, led Peña Nieto to cancel a planned visit to Washington last month. The full article can be read on worldpoliticsreview.com