OPINION
New NAFTA is the beginning of the end for ‘free trade’
The ‘USMCA’ deal steps away from the failed globalization model, and begins to recognize our national interests. But we can do better.
By STAN SORSCHER
For decades, establishment thinking told us that “free trade” was the only possible approach for managing globalization. The 2016 presidential campaign and NAFTA 2.0 have burst that bubble. While millions of voters are ready to ditch free trade, we need more clarity on what comes next.
Rules in the original NAFTA tilted heavily in favor of global companies. The NAFTA approach blurred national boundaries, national identities, and national interests. It merged our economy into the global economy. It exploited low wages, and weak protections in Mexico for workers and the environment. The NAFTA approach delivered big gains to a few, while millions are left behind.
The new NAFTA, known as USMCA, starts to move us in a new direction.
● USMCA says a certain fraction of imported automobiles must be made by workers making at least $16 per hour. This is not free trade. It’s a national strategy that requires a large portion of autos to be made in Canada and the U.S.
● USMCA raises the content of cars that must come from North America. That is not free trade. It is a regional strategy to retain our automobile supply chain in North America, rather than moving more production to China, Korea, Japan, and other countries.
● USMCA says Mexico will improve its labor standards. That’s a damn good idea. But it’s not free trade. It is an industrial strategy to help workers share in the gains they create.
● USMCA partially dismantles the notorious corporate-friendly dispute settlement system established in the old NAFTA. This dispute settlement system was a gift to global producers who wanted to move production from the U.S. and Canada to low-wage countries, and escape legitimate labor and environmental regulations. By partially eliminating that dispute system, USMCA moves us away from the NAFTA model and makes it easier for the U.S., Mexico, and Canada to regulate in the public interest.
● USMCA recognizes a sovereign right for Mexico and Canada to strengthen their cultural industries and shelter their cultural identity from the dominant influence from the U.S. Protecting cultural and national identity is the opposite of free trade.
This may explain why the name USMCA — the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement — does not contain the words “free trade.”
USMCA keeps many bad features from the original NAFTA.
USMCA ignores climate change, arguably the biggest market failure in human history. Stronger environmental provisions are must-haves for any national strategy. Same for currency misalignment, and protections for human rights, food safety, public health, prudent financial regulation, and other significant public interests.
Canada has a supply management system for dairy where Canadian farmers produce just the right amount to supply their own country at stable prices. We dismantled our supply management system years ago. Since then, family farms in the U.S. have declined drastically. Global agri-businesses have done well, using economies of scale and access to products in different markets to over-produce and drive down prices for smaller farmers in the U.S.
Maybe we should reconsider our opposition of Canada’s supply management. We could think more about family farmers who sustain social and economic well-being in rural communities, and less about factory farms that overproduce and force young people to migrate away from rural communities.
China has targeted 10 industries of the future for R&D and economic development. China invests heavily in artificial intelligence and renewable energy, which helped China dominate production of solar panels and wind turbines. That’s the opposite of free trade.
Germany, Switzerland, and other European countries see workforce programs and other public policies as legitimate investments in a national industrial strategy to build and retain their manufacturing base. That’s not free trade.
These national strategies recognize legitimate national interests, raise living standards, and bring long-term well-being to their home countries.
So, here are two approaches to globalization.
● The free trade approach (which was never free and not really about trade) blurs our national identity, merges our economy with others around the world, produces a race to the bottom, helps hold wages stagnant, worsens inequality, de-industrializes our economy, erodes social cohesion, and destabilizes us politically. In this model, the purpose of an economy is to put investors and global corporations first. Gains may or may not trickle down to workers and communities.
● The industrial strategy approach recognizes legitimate national interests, gives government an important policy role in raising living standards, improves well-being, and invests in infrastructure, research in new technology, and workforce development. These public investments are meant to re-industrialize our economy. In this model, the purpose of an economy is to raise living standards and improve well-being. Investors and global companies then share in the gains from a prosperous stable society.
To be clear, USMCA doesn’t fundamentally shift our approach from “free trade” to national strategy. Better to say, USMCA marks a turning point. It recognizes we are in a deep hole, and stops digging the hole deeper. USMCA reduces the harm we saw from the original free trade model in NAFTA.
Good. We should reduce harm.
Even better would be to pause trade deals, recognize legitimate national interests, and develop appropriate national strategies. We would then write very different trade agreements, that share gains more equitably, and restore trust in the way we manage globalization.