It's funny how the messy details in these articles don't match the big
rhetoric about "free trade" at all...

Auto-Parts Dispute Taps the Brakes on Pacific Trade Deal

North American and Japanese industries disagree on rules of origin for
components



http://www.wsj.com/articles/auto-parts-dispute-taps-the-brakes-on-pacific-trade-deal-1441272600



By WILLIAM MAULDIN And  DUDLEY ALTHAUS

Sept. 3, 2015 5:30 a.m. ET



A fight over how cars are assembled is pitting North America’s auto
industry against Japan’s in a dispute now holding up a major trade
agreement spanning the Pacific.



The spat over which cars should be eligible for duty-free trade surfaced
during high-level talks in late July that failed to wrap up the 12-nation
Trans-Pacific Partnership. The auto impasse is the most recent complication
to finishing the TPP talks, along with dairy trade and the
intellectual-property protections afforded to biologic drugs, as well as
the election season in Canada and the approaching campaigns in the U.S. and
Japan.



Japanese auto makers rely to a larger degree than their North American
peers on components produced in other countries, such as China and
Thailand, outside of the proposed TPP bloc. They don’t want the agreement
to disrupt that supply chain.



The Mexican auto industry is leading a campaign to ensure cars freely
traded within the TPP have at least half their components originating in
the bloc. American labor groups and some suppliers, worried about more jobs
being moved overseas, also favor tighter rules in the TPP.



ENLARGE

In the middle of the dispute are U.S. officials, who have been negotiating
intensely with Japan for more than a year on auto and other issues but who
also don’t want to upset American workers or North American neighbors.



The stakes are highest for Mexico, which uses existing free-trade
agreements to attract investment and boost production.



“We are very worried about this,” said Eduardo Solis, executive director of
the Mexican Automotive Industry Association, known as AMIA. As leading
suppliers of cars and parts to the giant U.S. market, Mexico and Canada
don’t want a Pacific deal to shift trade advantages to Japan.



The car and parts dispute highlights how the two-decade-old North American
Free Trade Agreement has built an automotive powerhouse within the U.S.,
Canada and Mexico.



AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka, shown this spring on Capitol Hill, is
pushing for stricter rules of origin in the Pacific trade agreement. ENLARGE

AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka, shown this spring on Capitol Hill, is
pushing for stricter rules of origin in the Pacific trade agreement. PHOTO:
EVAN VUCCI/ASSOCIATED PRESS

“We’re going to lose what we have gained under Nafta,” said Oscar Albin,
executive director of the National Auto Parts Industry, Mexico’s industry
association. “We’re going to lose production of auto parts and the United
States is going to lose the prime materials markets. This is a grave
danger.”



Mr. Albin and other industry officials are pushing for at least a 50%
content rule for auto parts under the TPP. With some 700,000 employees and
export sales of $60 billion—mostly to the U.S. and Canada—the auto-parts
industry serves as a linchpin of Mexican manufacturing.



U.S. and Japanese officials say the rules are complicated and that
percentages in Nafta don’t translate easily into the so-called rules of
origin under negotiation in the TPP.



“We are working toward a strong rule of origin in TPP that meets our
objective of making sure that TPP benefits go to TPP countries and that
promotes a vibrant domestic automotive industry and the jobs it supports,”
said Matt McAlvanah, a spokesman for the U.S. trade representative’s office.



Detroit auto makers in general prefer rules of origin somewhere in the
middle, because strict rules could crimp their reliance on global supply
chains, while lax rules open Detroit up to increased competition from Asia,
said an executive at one U.S. auto maker.



But labor groups that represent a swath of the industry, including
auto-parts workers, want tight rules to prevent the bulk of auto components
from being produced in countries, including China, that aren’t preparing to
sign on to the labor and environmental standards of the TPP.



“It will cost jobs,” AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka said Tuesday in
Washington. Mr. Trumka said official consideration of reportedly lax rules
of origin is “ludicrous,” and he sent a letter last month to the U.S. trade
representative, Michael Froman, to push for stricter rules.



For Mexico, loose rules of origin in the TPP could undermine its efforts to
push into the luxury car business and give Japan’s producers a leg up,
industry experts say. “We could see very cheap Toyotas or Lexuses arriving
in the U.S. with lots of Chinese parts, said Sean McAlinden, chief
economist at the Center for Automotive Research in Ann Arbor, Mich.



Lax rules of origin would also undermine the Obama administration’s
argument that the TPP would establish rules of the road that put pressure
on China’s dominance of the region. “If the aim is to build a trade bloc to
counter the Chinese, how do you open up this trade bloc to massive imports
from the Chinese?” Mr. McAlinden said.



A spokesman for the Washington office of the Japan Automobile Manufacturers
Association declined to comment, citing differing views among its members.
A Japanese official said Tokyo backs allowing a greater percentage of parts
from outside the bloc in order to defend auto makers’ existing supply
chains, not to encourage outsourcing to China.
_______________________________________________
pen-l mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.csuchico.edu/mailman/listinfo/pen-l

Reply via email to