NAFTA 2.0: Free Trade or Central Planning?

Guest Post by Ron Paul

Last week the United States, Mexico, and Canada agreed to replace the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) with a new United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA). Sadly, instead of replacing NAFTA’s managed trade with true free trade, the new USMCA expands government’s control over trade.

For example, under the USMCA’s “rules of origin,” at least 75 percent of a car’s parts must be from the US, Canada, or Mexico in order to avoid tariffs. This is protectionism designed to raise prices of cars using materials from outside North America.

The USMCA also requires that 40 to 45 percent of an automobile’s content be made by workers earning at least 16 dollars per hour. Like all government-set wages, this requirement will increase prices and decrease employment.

The USMCA also requires Mexico to pass legislation recognizing the “right of collective bargaining.” In other words, this so-called free trade agreement forces Mexico to import US-style compulsory unionism. If the Mexican legislature does not comply, the US and Canada will impose tariffs on Mexican goods.

The USMCA also requires the three countries to abide by the International Labour Organization (ILO) standards for worker rights. So, if, for example, the bureaucrats at the ILO declared that Right to Work laws violate “international labor standards”’ because they weaken collective bargaining and give Right to Work states an unfair advantage over compulsory unionism states and countries, the federal government may have to nullify all state Right to Work laws.

The USMCA also obligates the three countries to work together to improve air quality. This sounds harmless but could be used as a backdoor way to impose costly new regulations and taxes, such as a cap-and-trade scheme, on America.

This agreement also forbids the use of currency devaluation as a means of attempting to gain a competitive advantage in international trade. Enforcement of this provision will be difficult if not impossible, as no central bank will ever admit it is devaluing currency to obtain a competitive advantage in international trade. Of course, given that the very act of creating money lowers its value, the only way to stop central banks from devaluing currency is to put them out of business. Sadly, I don’t think the drafters of the USMCA seek to restore free-market money.

The currency provision will likely be used to justify coordination of monetary policy between the Federal Reserve and the Mexican and Canadian central banks. This will lead to region-wide inflation and a global currency war as the US pressures Mexico and Canada to help the Fed counter other countries’ alleged currency manipulation and challenges to the dollar’s reserve currency status.

A true free trade deal would simply reduce or eliminate tariffs and other trade barriers. It would not dictate wages and labor standards, or require inter-governmental cooperation on environmental standards and monetary policy. A true free trade deal also would not, as the USMCA does, list acceptable names for types of cheeses.

Those of us who support real free trade must not let supporters of the USMCA get away with claiming the USMCA has anything to do with free trade. We must also fight the forces of protectionism that are threatening to start a destructive trade war. Also, we must work to stop the government from trying to control our economic activities through regulations, taxes, and (most importantly) control of the currency through central banking and legal tender laws.

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15 Comments
Excommunicated
Excommunicated
October 8, 2018 9:58 am

“the new USMCA expands government’s control over trade.”

More proof there is no REAL difference between republicans and democrats.

“The USMCA also obligates the three countries to work together to improve air quality. This sounds harmless but could be used as a backdoor way to impose costly new regulations and taxes, such as a cap-and-trade scheme, on America.”

I guess if Trump could get us out of the Paris Climate Accord, he can start his own version right here instead. Thanks for the bait and switch. What’s the difference between Obama and Trump? NOTHING! But theres always the chance you can vote your way out of it next time around/s.

Anonymous
Anonymous
October 8, 2018 10:24 am

More old school chalkboard idealism by Paul.

2 Things Paul doesn’t get. Capital flows and Supply Chains.

Prices only go up if the dollar shrinks on an international value. And all countries have steel including Germany who’s labor and environmental laws are very strong.

Germany doesn’t want to be held hostage by importing all its steel from say Poland or Bulgaria.

It’s time to retire the libertairian zealots like Paul for the pragmatist like Trump.

StackingStock
StackingStock
  Anonymous
October 8, 2018 12:12 pm

Hey fuck nuts while you were voting for the lesser of two evils, which is still fucking evil.

Ron Paul was our only hope to turn American around, keep your delusional beliefs about Trump.

MrLiberty
MrLiberty
  Anonymous
October 8, 2018 12:22 pm

The value of the dollar is ALSO being manipulated by the central planners. Sound currencies do NOT suffer from that kind of BS in honest and open markets.

Wip
Wip
October 8, 2018 11:02 am

Is this better or worse for labor?

The real war, imo, is the war between capital and labor. Between those with power and those without.

Dan
Dan
October 8, 2018 11:25 am

Love Dr. Paul… he is philosophically correct, but this is the real-world and he’s kind-of missing the bigger point here. It’s gonna take a while to get it straightened out (or outright killed). This re-negotiated product is not a perfect treaty, but definitely a step in the right direction.

starfcker
starfcker
  Dan
October 8, 2018 12:32 pm

He is not philosophically correct. And by what he writes, he would sell you out as quick as Mitt Romney would. His time has come and gone. Now he’s just a bought-and-paid-for globalist piece of shit. Hey moron, do you see what free trade did to the financial security of your fellow Americans? Does that ever register in the bathouse you call a skull? 5 years ago I would have said he was in the top two or three people who could make a difference in our country. It’s pointless to listen to him now.

starfcker
starfcker
  starfcker
October 8, 2018 12:47 pm

“For example, under the USMCA’s “rules of origin,” at least 75 percent of a car’s parts must be from the US, Canada, or Mexico in order to avoid tariffs. This is protectionism designed to raise prices of cars using materials from outside North America.” No, this is intended to keep Canada from assembling cars from Chinese parts and sending them across duty-free into the United States. This is truly rising to the level of dumbfuckery. Protecting what is yours is never a bad thing, except in the minds of screwballs like this. We either have a country or we don’t

BL
BL
  Administrator
October 8, 2018 7:43 pm

Star- The truth is that none of the new(?) trade deal will take effect for at least two years or more in which time many things could change globally. I agree with RP that this deal opens the door for a cap-and-trade scheme. The celebrated agreement ain’t a done deal for quite some time down the road.

Peacocks crow?

starfcker
starfcker
  BL
October 8, 2018 8:57 pm

It’s a done deal, Bea. Here’s the workaround. In return for how generous we have been with Mexico they are going to be the one that withdraws, leaving our Congress no choice. Checkmate

BL
BL
  starfcker
October 8, 2018 11:32 pm

Niggah Please….don’t make them pop a cap-and-trade in yo’ ass whitebread.

MrLiberty
MrLiberty
October 8, 2018 12:23 pm

It does NOT take 1000+ pages to describe free trade…..or freedom for that matter. Central planning ALWAYS fails.

Thunderbird
Thunderbird
October 8, 2018 10:39 pm

Central planning for the corporations.