Fear of age-old protectionist sentiment returns in post-NAFTA era
WASHINGTON — With a new continental trade deal all but done, it might be tempting to think that cross-border business anxiety will soon be a thing of the past, at least for a while.
But as the NAFTA era gives way to the age of the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement, experts say it’s time to focus once again on Buy American, an age-old protectionist tool that some fear could be on the verge of a new dawn regardless of whether Donald Trump or a progressive Democrat is in the White House next year.
The president’s signature on a new USMCA implementation bill was barely a week old when reports began to surface of a draft executive order that would pull the U.S. out of a procurement agreement under the World Trade Organization that provides signatories, including Canada, preferential access to U.S. government contracts worth more than $800 billion a year.
The White House has been silent on the subject, and the office of U.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer did not respond to queries Monday. But the reports clearly caught the eye of the federal government in Ottawa, where the House of Commons is moving toward ratifying a NAFTA replacement that lacks the procurement provisions of its predecessor.