NAFTA
"The free trade argument states that, if each nation produces what it
does
best and permits trade, over the long run all will enjoy lower prices
and higher
levels of output, income, and consumption that could be achieved
in
isolation." The North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), implemented
in
January of 1994, created a situation in North America in which there
are no
taxes on most products imported and exported between the three
countries.
Ideally, the governments of Canada, the U.S. and Mexico
believed that breaking
the trading barriers would increase jobs and other
things as it bettered each of
their economies. NAFTA, however, has not
necessarily helped the economies in the
way in which the governments had
projected. There was much speculation before
the signing of the treaty that
NAFTA would not work out the way it was projected
to. Some economists
believed that one major problem which NAFTA would create, as
opposed to what
the governments thought, is loss of jobs. "In Canada and
the United States,
much of the political opinions against NAFTA has centered
around the low wage
rates in Mexico and the possibility of jobs being moved
south of the Rio
Grande River." It had seemed obvious for some that many
wealthy factory
owners would move to or expand in Mexico, resulting in thousands
of lost
jobs. As well, this would clearly create more exports for Mexico, and
less
exports for Canada and the United States. However, in the eight months
after
the implementation of the agreement, Canada had exported 33.2% more
to
Mexico and imported 31% more from Mexico than usual. This may show
that Canada
still exported more to Mexico then it imported from them, but,
one must think
that when the agreement! was first implemented, exports to
Mexico may have
included factors of production, businesses, etc. If so, these
exports will have
soon leveled off and jobs would be lost in Canada as
businesses moved to Mexico.
This has been seen to be case with the United
States. "Although U.S.
exports to Mexico have grown since NAFTA went into
effect, the
Administration’s [Clinton’s] own numbers show that imports
from Mexico have
gone through the roof; a U.S. trade surplus of $1.7 billion
in 1993 spiraled
downward into a deficit of $15.4 billion by 1995." Not only
has NAFTA
caused a loss in jobs in all three countries, but it has also
caused a decrease
in job benefits for workers in Canada and the United
States. Before NAFTA went
into effect, the corporate group USA*NAFTA claimed
that "NAFTA itself will
improve working conditions by generating economic
growth, which will enable all
three countries to provide more jobs with
higher pay in a better working
environment." However, this proved not to be
the case. In actuality, NAFTA
has given corporations more power to lower
wages and decrease working
conditions. "The most direct method is through
‘whipsaw bargaining,’ or
threatening to shift production to Mexico unless
workers agreed to
concessions." In a situation where one’s job is at risk,
one must accept
wage and benefit cuts. It seems as though since the
implementation of NAFTA,
workers rights have diminished. Even though
productivity growth has occurred in
many corporations, "In Canada, as well as
in the U.S., real wages ar! e
stagnating and the proportion of full-time
workers living in poverty continues
to grow." There should never be any
workers, let alone full-time workers,
living in poverty. In Canada as in any
country, poverty should not exist among
the working class. This is definitely
not the case in Mexico where NAFTA has
slammed the middle class back into
poverty. Another thing which NAFTA affects is
the environment. NAFTA
supporters promised that the agreement would lead to
increased investment in
environmental cleanup and less maquiladoras along the
U.S.-Mexico border.
However, many communities still lack access to both water
and sewage systems.
"Today, only 10 percent of Mexico’s yearly output of
7 million tons of
hazardous waste receives adequate treatment, with the rest
poured into
clandestine waste dumps or municipal sewers." Maquiladoras are
plants owned
by foreign companies which send raw materials to Mexico for
assembly. NAFTA
has eliminated the duty on the importation of those goods back
to Canada and
the United States. NAFTA has caused an increase in the amount
of
maquiladoras. This has caused an increase in the amount of pollution in
Mexico.
NAFTA has taken emphasis away from the global environment as it
puts the
production of goods and exportation first. If workers aren’t
healthy, are we
not headed for lower levels of pro! duction? This is without
even mentioning the
possibilities of a continent-wide epidemic. How can our
economy be healthy if
our people aren’t even healthy? Now, we shall look at
the benefits of the
North American Free Trade Agreement to the Canadian
economy, as well as those of
the other two countries. First of all, NAFTA has
eased the creation of new
coalitions which cross borders and political party
lines, "...and embrace
constituencies as diverse as workers, farmers,
environmentalists, consumers and
religious groups." "Canada’s Bank of
Montreal has launched the first
mutual fund, to be marketed in all three
countries, targeting companies poised
to cash in on the North American Free
Trade Agreement." Companies such as
Bombardier who have constructed
plants in Mexico are prime candidates of this
mutual fund. Mexico’s economy
has gotten a little better. Canadian and U.S.
companies invested $2.4 billion
in Mexico in the first eight months of 1994,
accounting for 55% of Mexico’s
total foreign direct investment. This is good
for the Mexican economy in the
long-term as well as in the short-term. In the
long-term, these investments
will lead to more exports. Corporations from Canada
and the U.S. build plants
in Mexico, and export those goods from Mexico back
into the Canadian and
United States economy. Another thing NAFTA does is as it
creates a
"trinational superpower", it becomes appealing to foreign
investors. For
example, Toyota Motor Co. built a $450 million expansion in
Ontario to
make Corollas for the North American market. Foreign countries want
to invest
and build plants in North America to get in on the North American
market with
less angst. It not only costs less for Canada, the U.S. and Mexico
to trade,
but it costs less for any foreign corporation with a factory in
North
America. As well, these new plants in Canada mean more jobs
available for
Canadian citizens. Another advantage NAFTA gives to the
Canadian economy is
higher productivity levels. Canadian corporations with
plants in Mexico produce
goods at lower costs. Canadian corporations benefit
with these low production
costs, due to low hourly work wages in Mexico.
Canadian corporations had not
been so eager to build factories in Mexico
prior to the implementation of the
agreement due to the tariffs which must be
paid when the goods crossed the
border. It can be seen that there are more
points against the North American
Free Trade Agreement than for it. NAFTA
must be in place for nine hundred days
since its implementation in January of
1994. It seems as though the majority of
citizens in all three countries in
the agreement are now against NAFTA. NAFTA
does not create the jobs it said
it would in any of the three countries
involved. In fact, thousands of jobs
have been lost. Though productivity may be
up in many corporations, workers
have not been taking part in the benefits.
Workers have actually lost
benefits and have had wage cuts. The environment is
also doing much suffering
due to the plants created in Mexico without adequate
disposal of toxic
wastes. It had been the speculation of the governments of all
three countries
in the agreement that NAFTA would cause great economic growth.
Somehow,
the governments were somewhat off in their predictions. Now Canada, and
the
rest of the western hemisphere, will
suffer.
Bibliography
Anderson, Sarah. et al. "NAFTA: Trinational
Fiasco." The Nation
July 15, 1996: 26-29 Carbaugh, Richard G.
International Economics. U.S.A.:
Wadsworth Publishing Company, 1989.
Dentzer, Susan. "The Pain and Gain of
Trade." U.S. News Sept. 1992: 62+.
Harbrecht, Douglas. et al. "What
Has NAFTA Wrought? Plenty Of Trade."
Business Week Nov. 21, 1994: 48-49
Lewis, Charles, and Margaret Ebrahim.
"Can Mexico and Big Business USA Buy
NAFTA?" The Nation June 14,
1993.