Why reshaping NAFTA could be good for Mexico

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Why reshaping NAFTA could be good for Mexico

 

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NAFTA contributed to a US trade deficit with Mexico reaching US$63.2 billion last year.  Image: REUTERS/Enrique Castro-Mendivil

 

Asit K. ​Biswas and ​Cecilia ​Tortajada ​

World ​Economic Forum |​ April 19, 2017 ​

Among other ​threats ​targeting ​Mexico during ​his election ​campaign, US ​President ​Donald Trump ​harshly ​criticised the ​North American ​Free Trade ​Agreement (​NAFTA), a 23-​year-old ​tripartite deal ​that removed ​tariffs and ​significantly ​increased ​commerce ​between Canada, ​the United ​States and ​Mexico. ​

Renegotiation ​of the deal ​is ​likely to ​start late this ​year .

As Trump has pointed out , NAFTA ​contributed to ​a US trade ​deficit with ​Mexico ​reaching ​US$63.2 billion last year . This is the ​country’s ​fourth-largest ​trade deficit,​ ​after China, ​Japan and ​Germany . America’​s deficit with ​the other NAFTA ​nation, Canada, ​was ​slightly over US$11 billion  in 2016.

But that’​s only part of ​the story. ​Remove cars and ​auto part ​imports, for ​example, and ​the US deficit ​with Mexico ​virtually disappears .

Overall, NAFTA has been beneficial  to ​Mexico, Canada ​and the US ​alike. Since it ​was signed in ​1994, foreign ​direct ​investments (​FDI) in Mexico ​have averaged 2.​6% of GDP (​compared to 1% ​for two decades ​before ​NAFTA ). At present, ​annual ​bilateral trade ​between the US ​and Mexico is ​running at US$​580 billion. ​

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Image: US ​Chamber of ​Commerce ​

Agricultural gains

Much of Trump’s outdated ​protectionist ​rhetoric  hinges ​on manufacturing,​ outsourcing of ​jobs to Mexico ​and immigration.​ Agriculture ​– a key ​link between ​the two nations ​– does ​not seem to ​have entered ​his calculations.​

Globalisation ​may have ​contributed to ​manufacturing ​job losses in ​the US, but it ​has had ​significant ​benefits for ​the American ​agricultural ​sector. US ​exports of ​agricultural ​products to ​Mexico have ​increased ​nearly ​fivefold since ​NAFTA was ​signed .

For the ​2014–15 ​crop marketing ​year, US corn ​production was ​360 million ​metric tons,​ ​13% of which was exported . Mexico ​accounted for ​23% of these ​exports. ​

In 2016, ​Mexico ​imported ​US$17.9 ​billion in ​American ​agricultural ​products : US$2.6 ​billion in corn,​ US$1.5 billion ​in soybeans, US$​1.3 billion in ​pork and ​US$1.2 billion ​in dairy ​products .

Around 98% of ​the corn that ​forms a staple ​of the Mexican ​diet comes ​from the US . Mexico also ​buys 7.8% of ​all US pork ​production. ​

What has been ​good for US ​farmers has ​actually hurt ​Mexican ​agriculture. ​Lulled by a ​steady supply ​of cheap US ​farm products ​and low ​transportation ​costs, and ​assuming that ​the good times ​will continue, ​Mexico has not ​diversified its ​agricultural ​imports. It ​depends heavily ​on US farmers ​to feed its ​people, ​endangering ​Mexico’​s ​long-term food security .

America losing ground

The US is the ​world’s ​top exporter of ​agricultural ​products, but ​there are ​other ​global ​breadbaskets , including ​Brazil, ​Australia, ​Russia, ​Argentina and ​Ukraine. As ​these rivals ​have adopted ​more modern ​farming and ​agricultural ​practices and ​improved their ​transport and ​product-​handling ​infrastructure ​in recent years,​ America’​s global export ​share has ​been ​steadily declining .

Political ​decisions have ​at times ​accelerated ​this decline. ​In 1979, the ​US ​banned grain ​sales to the ​then-Soviet ​Union  because ​of its invasion ​of Afghanistan. ​This forced the ​USSR to improve ​its own grain ​production, and,​ in 2016, ​Russia ​surpassed the ​US ​for the first ​time in wheat ​exports .

Might Donald ​Trump’s ​administration ​be facing a ​similar ​watershed ​moment for ​American ​agriculture? ​

As America ​threatens to ​close its ​agricultural ​export door, it ​has damaged ​Mexico’s ​confidence in ​the reliability ​of its major ​supplier –​ perhaps ​permanently. In ​a January 2017 ​Washington Post ​opinion piece, ​former Mexican ​president ​Ernesto ​Zedillo ​wrote  that it ​was a “​waste of ​time” to ​play “​NAFTA tweaking ​games with the ​Trump ​Administration”​.

Though Mexico ​currently has ​free trade ​agreements with ​45 countries (​more than any ​other country ​in the ​world ), agriculture ​has consistently ​been the ​most ​sensitive ​issue in ​Mexico’s ​free trade ​agreements . Trump has changed that.

Today, the ​country is ​accelerating ​its search for ​new partners to ​meet its ​national ​agricultural ​needs. Sensing ​long-term ​opportunities,​ ​Brazil  and Argentina  – ​both major ​exporters of ​beef, wheat, ​soybeans and ​other prized US ​agricultural ​products –​ are elbowing ​their way to ​the front of ​the queue. ​Neither ​currently has a ​free trade ​agreement with ​Mexico. ​

Mexico’s ​Deputy Economy ​Minister Juan ​Carlos Baker ​has said that ​the country is ​“pretty ​far advanced ​with Brazil. ​Argentina is a ​few steps ​behind”, ​confirming that ​Mexico could ​offer South ​American ​producers terms ​similar to ​those currently ​enjoyed by ​American ​farmers “​if it suits us ”.

As Brazil’​s Agriculture ​Minister Blairo ​Maggi has ​announced that ​the country is ​“​back in the game ”.

Mexico is also ​discussing ​bilateral deals ​with Australia ​and New Zealand,​ ​two other main ​food-exporting ​countries .

In addition to ​government-to-​government ​agreements, ​companies that ​produce and ​trade ​agricultural ​products are ​also seeing ​Mexico’s ​vast import ​market with new ​eyes. One of ​them is ​Adecoagro , which owns ​and leases some ​434,000 ​hectares of ​farmlands in ​Brazil, ​Argentina and ​Uruguay and ​harvests two ​million tons of ​agricultural ​products ​annually. ​

The New York-​traded Buenos ​Aires-based ​firm, ​whose ​major shareholders  include ​the Hungarian-​American ​investor George ​Soros, the ​Dutch Pension Fund PGGM  and the ​Qatar ​Investment ​Authority, ​currently ​exports ​agricultural ​products such ​as corn, wheat, ​soybean and ​cotton to ​Africa, Asia ​and Middle East.​

It sees NAFTA-​related ​uncertainties ​as an ​opportunity to ​penetrate the ​Mexican market, ​especially if ​Brazilian and ​Argentinian ​products are ​granted ​favourable US-​style export ​arrangements. ​

Mexico’​s brighter ​outlook ​

In addition to ​diversifying ​its trading ​partners, ​Mexico is also ​seeking to ​stimulate its ​domestic ​agricultural ​production, ​according to ​several ​government ​officials and ​advisers. ​

New policies ​currently under ​consideration ​would ​incentivise ​farmers to ​produce more, ​modernise their ​farms, increase ​crop yields, ​and expand ​cultivable ​areas. The ​country is also ​looking to ​improve its ​transportation ​and storage ​infrastructure, ​including ports ​that could be ​used for bulk ​grain imports. ​

All of these ​efforts will ​help put Mexico ​on more equal ​footing with ​the United ​States in ​future NAFTA ​negotiations. ​So, too, ​would ​retaliatory measures  against ​a threatened US ​border tax. (​And, anyway, if ​the US does ​decide to ​implement one , the market ​is likely to ​sell off ​Mexican peso ​aggressively, ​making Mexican ​products ​cheaper even ​with new ​tariffs.) ​

Like the 1979 ​US grain ban ​that helped ​Russia improve ​its agriculture,​ Trump’s ​vituperation ​may prove ​beneficial to ​Mexico (and bad ​for the US) in ​the decades to ​come. ​

In the ​meantime, ​Mexico is ​facing a tough ​political and ​social ​landscape. ​President ​Enrique ​Peña ​Nieto’s ​approval rating ​is ​nearing single digits  and the ​the economy is ​performing ​anaemically, ​with 2017 ​economic growth ​predicted to be ​a ​paltry 1% .

With a ​presidential ​election ​approaching in ​2018, Peñ​a Nieto is ​unlikely to ​hard sell to ​his people a ​new NAFTA that ​does not appeal ​to Mexicans. So ​it would ​be ​good politics , too, to play ​hardball with ​Trump. ​

Mexico has ​more policy ​options than it ​thinks. And it ​may have less ​to lose than ​its northern ​neighbour. ​

If ending ​NAFTA hurts ​farmers in ​America’s ​Corn Belt, ​who ​voted ​overwhelmingly ​for Trump , there goes ​the Republican’​s reelection. ​

This article ​is published in ​collaboration ​with  ​  The Conversation   

Asit K. Biswas   is ​Distinguished ​Visiting ​Professor at ​the Lee Kuan ​Yew School of ​Public Policy ​in Singapore ​and co-founder ​of the Third ​World Center ​for Water ​Management.​  ​  Cecilia Tortajada   is ​Senior Research ​Fellow, Lee ​Kuan Yew School ​of Public ​Policy, ​National ​University of ​Singapore and ​editor-in-chief ​of the ​International ​Journal of ​Water Resources ​Development. ​

Source: http://bit.ly/2qeBMDx 

 

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