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Economist tells the truth, nothing but the truth, but not the whole truth about US-Mexican affairs

 


THE question whether NAFTA was a step to rival the creation of NATO, or a mortal blow to US jobs from cheap Mexican labour was the big talking point when they forged the North American Free-Trade Agreement (NAFTA) back in the early '90s.

Looking back, London's Economist concludes NAFTA's backers have won the argument. America's trade with Mexico increased by 506 per cent between 1993 and 2012, compared with 279 per cent with non-NAFTA countries. A thoroughly good thing as the Economist sees it.

But with illegal aliens streaming across the border arousing much suspicion that the Economist's sunny conclusions about greater cultural integration are not as sanguine as that newspaper suggests. There are strong countervailing fears of these developments are not good and they crowd the issue lists of presidential politics.

The Economist also points out that the biggest gains in trade were early in NAFTA's life. Momentum has slowed in recent years. "If the agreement is to progress, three things need to be done. First, the business of shipping goods across borders needs an overhaul," it said.

Crossing from Mexico to the United States, waiting times are far too long; much of the infrastructure is antiquated; railway and haulage crews still change over at the border.

Measures to allow the pre-clearance of goods before they reach the border are held up by America's "needless insistence" that its customs agents should be allowed to carry guns, against Mexican laws, when they operate south of the border, the Economist said.

One can forgive the Excited States of America for sticking to its principles here, as Economist appears to forget that most every uniformed official in Mexico is armed and smugglers caught with contraband are more likely to pull guns than say: "It's a good nick, Bill" and go quietly. Mexico is not England.

One had little quarrel with the Economist when it says NAFTA could also do more to avert the negative effects of regional trade deals. Such deals risk diverting trade from countries outside the club to those inside it.

NAFTA should also show how regional deals could be bridges to wider liberalisation, it says. The United States, Canada and Mexico have each pursued free-trade agreements with the European Union separately, for example; instead, they should act in concert.

NAFTA itself should also map out a way to invite in new members from Central America, the Caribbean and Latin America, to spread free trade across all the Americas.

But when it says, the bloc should embrace the freer movement of people, the point is highly debateable - especially now. NAFTA had virtually nothing to say about labour mobility at its launch, beyond creating a visa category for "professionals". Today, such ideas invite disagreement of not violent controversy given the present situation.

"The United States is not about to embrace European-style open borders, but more generous dispensations for frequent travellers from Mexico would be a start," the Economist said. A start to what, many will ask - and rightfully so.

In 2011 America traded as much with Canada and Mexico as it did with the BRIC countries (Brazil, Russia, India, China), Japan and South Korea combined. The "giant sucking sound" that presidential candidate Ross Perot predicted would be heard as Mexico vacuumed up American jobs never materialised; if jobs have moved anywhere in the past two decades, they have gone to China, not Mexico.

Industries from aerospace to cars have woven supply chains back and forth across North America's borders. Some 40 per cent of the content of imports from Mexico into the United States, and 25 per cent of the content of imports from Canada, originated in the United States itself. Helped by rising energy production in all three countries, Factory North America is being created, the Economist contends.

Of the three countries, Canada's per capita GDP per person has grown fastest, but Mexico - an emerging market hitched to two larger, rich ones - has been the big winner, it said.

Import competition has improved Mexican manufacturing productivity; foreign direct investment has surged. NAFTA shored up Mexico's domestic political commitment to open markets, and provided a template for the country's other free-trade agreements (14 and counting). The deal has not closed the vast income gap with Canada and the US, but it has helped make Mexico more stable and prosperous.

Despite the cheery British outlook, it must be stressed that the Economist ignores problems that scream out from today's headlines. The problems described threaten to change America's demographics profoundly in ways most Americans would clearly don't want. The Economist's testimony is undoubtedly the truth, and nothing but the truth - but not necessarily the whole truth. There is much the Economist will not see because to see it, is to acknowledge it, which would require painful descriptions of problems that it is not prepared to provide.

 

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