US declaration to exit USMCA to start a decade-long countdown for the pact

The Trump administration is expected to formally declare on Wednesday it will not extend the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement as the three countries haggle over proposed changes.

The Trump administration is expected to formally declare on Wednesday it will not extend the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement as the three countries haggle over proposed changes. (Rebecca Cook, Reuters)


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KEY TAKEAWAYS
  • The Trump administration plans to announce on Wednesday the U.S. will exit the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement.
  • The announcement will mean a six-year review session begins, focusing on U.S. demands for trade changes.
  • Trade talks are continuing with Mexico, sans Canada, with a long list of bilateral trade disputes.

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump's administration is expected to formally declare on Wednesday that it will not extend the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement on trade, starting a decade-long clock ​to wind down the 32-year-old North American free trade zone as the three countries haggle over proposed changes.

That declaration will kick off a six-year review session, part of a "sunset clause" negotiated by President Donald Trump's first administration. However, it will do little to alter contentious negotiations ‌over the pact's future, including sweeping demands to boost U.S. and regional content in North American automotive production and trade protections to block Chinese goods from benefiting from USMCA.

Trade chiefs from the U.S., ⁠Mexico and Canada are expected to meet virtually on Wednesday and declare ​whether they want to extend the pact for another 16 years. ⁠Trade Representative Jamieson Greer has already scheduled a third round of negotiations with Mexico for the week of July 20, signaling his intent to keep pushing ‌for changes.

"We expect July 1 to come ‌and go, and for the United States to not confirm its wish to extend," said Greta Peisch, a former trade representative general ⁠counsel who is now a trade partner at Wiley Rein in Washington.

Peisch added that it's unclear "whether ⁠the U.S. says exactly what it's looking for in a public way" in a statement expected after the meeting.

Failure to reach agreement on revisions to USMCA would keep the trade pact in an indefinite limbo, with similar review sessions annually for the next 10 years, after which the North American trade pact would expire on July 1, 2036.

The review and sunset process, which was considered controversial when it was enacted, is separate from a termination clause that President Donald Trump or his Mexican and Canadian counterparts could exercise, triggering a U.S. withdrawal from the pact ‌within six months.

Trump, whose first administration negotiated USMCA to replace the 1994 North American Free Trade Agreement, hailed ​its 2020 launch as "the fairest, most balanced, and beneficial trade agreement we have ever signed into law."

But he quickly soured on USMCA as the goods trade deficit with Mexico expanded, partly because companies shifted supply chains away from China after he imposed steep tariffs on Chinese goods. Trump frequently says that he doesn't want to renew USMCA, favoring instead the steep tariffs that he has imposed on Mexican and Canadian autos, steel and aluminum.

US, Mexico talk without Canada

For now, the U.S. is holding formal negotiating rounds with Mexico only, leaving Canada to the side amid a long list of bilateral trade irritants ranging from Canada's restricted dairy market to Canadian provinces pulling American liquor from store shelves. Greer has planned no ​schedule to launch formal negotiations with Canada, though he holds discussions with his Canadian counterpart, Trade Minister Dominic LeBlanc.

For Mexico, Greer's team has demanded that all North American-built vehicles contain 50% ‌U.S.-specific content, a ‌figure that would drive regional required ⁠content up to 82% to qualify for U.S. benefits, sources familiar with the talks have said. Vehicles assembled in Mexico and Canada would still likely be charged some level of tariffs, Greer has said.

A Mexican official said that the U.S. and Mexico have discussed the idea of a universal global tariff of 15% on autos, but a lower rate for vehicles from Mexico and Canada if they agree on stricter rules of origin.

The official said Mexico and the United States ‌broadly agree on USMCA's problems: a steady ​decline in manufacturing jobs; falling content in autos as Asian parts increase; and ‌concerns over increasing transshipment.

"Mexico and the U.S. ⁠are in agreement about the goals. ​What we are discussing is how to reach them," the official added.

Contributing: Promit Mukherjee and Emily Green

The Key Takeaways for this article were generated with the assistance of large language models and reviewed by our editorial team. The article, itself, is solely human-written.

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David Lawder

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