Why has Trump refused to renew the USMCA, and what will that mean?
Trade ambassador says US will not approve trilateral agreement with Canada and Mexico ‘in its current form’. The United States has announced that it will
Trade ambassador says US will not approve trilateral agreement with Canada and Mexico ‘in its current form’. The United States has announced that it will not renew a trilateral trade agreement covering $1.6 trillion of trade between the US, Mexico and Canada, one day before the agreement was due for its first joint mandatory review. A statement from the US trade representative, Ambassador Jamieson Greer, on Wednesday said the US would not agree to renew the trilateral agreement, also known as USMCA, “in its current form”. “The United States will continue to engage with Mexico and Canada to address the Agreement’s shortcomings and our trade deficits with these countries. However, the Agreement remains in force pending resolution of these issues or until the Agreement’s termination,” the statement read. It added that the US will meet Mexico during the week of July 20 for a third round of bilateral negotiations related to the USMCA joint review. The US’s decision not to renew the deal comes after US President Donald Trump repeatedly expressed that he did not see the need for the trade agreement. In January, Trump said that there was “no real advantage to it; it’s irrelevant,” adding last month, “I don’t know that I’m going to renew it.” He also signalled that he was open to negotiations with Mexico and Canada, saying, “We’re talking to them.
We’ll see if we do something.” Here’s what we know about USMCA What is the USMCA? The trilateral deal came into effect on July 1, 2020, during Trump’s first term, replacing the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA). According to the US Department of State, the USMCA, created a “more balanced, reciprocal trade supporting high-paying jobs for Americans and grow the North American economy”. It also included chapters covering “Digital Trade, Anticorruption, and Good Regulatory Practices, as well as a chapter devoted to ensuring that Small and Medium Sized Enterprises benefit from the Agreement”. But the US’s latest decision will now trigger a si year review of the agreement under a “sunset clause” that Trump negotiated in his first term. Without an agreement to amend the deal, the trade agreement will expire on July 1, 2036. What is Trump’s criticism of the deal? Last month, Trump said of the agreement: “We don’t need anything that Canada has. We don’t need anything that Mexico has, but they need everything that we have. And they have to treat us better,” he said. In advance of the statement, Greer said more time is needed to address problems with the USMCA, which include growing US goods trade deficits with Mexico and Canada, reaching $197bn and $48.3bn respectively in 2025.
