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						Exclusive: Mexico-U.S. deal includes Mexican auto export 
						cap - sources
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		 [August 29, 2018] 
		 By David Shepardson and Ana Isabel Martinez 
 WASHINGTON/MEXICO CITY (Reuters) - A 
		proposed U.S.-Mexico trade deal would allow President Donald Trump to 
		slap punitive tariffs of up to 25 percent on imports of Mexican-made 
		cars, sport utility vehicles and auto parts above certain volumes, auto 
		executives and sources said on Tuesday.
 
 The United States and Mexico agreed on Monday to overhaul the North 
		American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), pressuring Canada to sign up to 
		new auto trade and dispute settlement rules to remain part of the 
		three-way pact.
 
 But a previously unreported side agreement between the two countries 
		would allow the United States to pursue "national security" tariffs on 
		annual Mexican car and SUV imports of over 2.4 million vehicles. The 
		side deal would allow national security levies on auto parts imports 
		above a value of $90 billion per year on the same grounds. The 
		administration plans to announce the results of a probe into whether 
		autos and part imports pose a national security risk in the coming 
		weeks.
 
 The study could be used to justify 25 percent U.S. tariffs on automotive 
		imports on the basis that protecting the U.S. auto industry is vital to 
		national security under a Cold War-era trade law.
 
		
		 
		Automakers are concerned that the agreement signals the United States 
		will proceed with national security tariffs – and are likely to use the 
		tariffs to win concessions from the European Union and Japan as well. 
		They have said the tariffs could cost hundreds of thousands of jobs and 
		dramatically raise vehicle prices.
 A separate side-agreement lays out a possible scenario in which the 
		United States increases its normal "most-favored nation" tariffs on 
		autos, currently 2.5 percent. A potential new, unspecified rate would be 
		applied to vehicles that do not meet the existing or revamped NAFTA.
 
 MEXICAN EXPORT CAP
 
 Mexico reserves the right to challenge the U.S. use of "national 
		security" tariffs at the World Trade Organization, people briefed on the 
		talks said.
 
 Exports of cars and SUVs from Mexico would face a 25 percent U.S. tariff 
		if they exceed 2.4 million vehicles and the United States imposes the 
		national security tariffs, the sources said. Below the cap, vehicles 
		that comply with new, tougher regional content requirements could enter 
		the U.S. duty-free.
 
 Vehicles within the cap which fail to comply with the new, tougher 
		content rules would pay a 2.5 percent tariff, the sources said.
 
 In 2017, nearly 1.8 million cars and SUVs were exported to the United 
		States from Mexico.
 
 The sources did not want to be identified because the details of the 
		agreement have not been officially released.
 
 U.S. officials have said the agreement is aimed at pulling more auto 
		industry jobs into the United States and Mexico. Terms of the deal are 
		not final, and could change depending on the outcome of negotiations 
		between the United States and Canada, and other factors.
 
 Duty-free auto parts exports from Mexico to the United States could be 
		capped at $90 billion a year under the agreement, said Ann Wilson, 
		senior vice president of government affairs at the Motor and Equipment 
		Manufacturers Association.
 
 The figure exceeds current levels, but parts shipments above that quota 
		could be subject to 232 tariffs, Wilson said.
 
 Mexican pickup trucks that do not comply with regional content quotas 
		already pay a 25 percent duty. It was not clear whether they could also 
		be subject to an additional quota.
 
 Moises Kalach, head of the international negotiating arm of Mexico's CCE 
		business lobby, said it was far from certain the United States would 
		impose the 232 tariffs, and that the current trading arrangements for 
		the industry were now safeguarded.
 
		
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			 A transport truck 
			carries new Toyota trucks through an inspection station after 
			clearing U.S. customs from Mexico at the border in Otay Mesa near 
			San Diego, California, U.S., April 28, 2017. REUTERS/Mike Blake/File 
			Photo 
            
			 
"We have a fall-back plan if they impose the 232, but there's also the 
possibility that Mexico is exempted from the 232," Kalach told Reuters.
 It is not clear how the quotas would be counted or administered.
 
 The deal also sets quotas for carmakers to use domestic steel and aluminum, the 
sources said. Vehicle components would be subject to regional content quotas at 
different levels, depending on the type of part or system. Engines and 
transmissions, the highest-value systems in a vehicle, would have a 75 percent 
regional content quota, the sources said.
 
 A United States Trade Representative spokeswoman declined comment about the 
previously undisclosed details of the U.S.-Mexico agreement.
 
The Mexican economy ministry did not immediately reply to a request for comment.
 The tariff mechanism in the preliminary U.S.-Mexico accord would likely change 
little for Detroit automakers such as General Motors Co, which builds large 
Chevrolet Silverado and GMC Sierra pickup trucks at a complex in Silao, Mexico.
 
 However, Asian and German automakers, and automakers and suppliers that want to 
expand production in Mexico, could be at a disadvantage, and be forced to source 
more production of both vehicles and engines in the United States.
 
 The revised trade agreement is expected to take effect in 2020 and be phased in 
over five years, the people familiar with the proposal said.
 
WHAT IS NORTH AMERICAN-MADE?
 A cap on Mexican vehicle exports to the United States would push automakers and 
suppliers to deal with a range of new challenges.
 
 The rules would encourage efforts to certify parts as North American-compliant 
even if they include content from elsewhere. That could add hundreds of millions 
of dollars in costs to automakers over the next decade, industry officials said.
 
 
The new cap on total vehicle exports could spur a rush for companies to announce 
additional production capacity in Mexico in the coming months to try to "lock 
in" space under the cap before the agreement takes effect, auto industry 
officials said.
 The new content rules and a new requirement that 40-45 percent of a vehicle be 
produced by workers earning $16 an hour or more, far higher than current Mexican 
rates, could lead automakers to try to raise vehicle prices.
 
 The details of the auto trade agreement are critical to automakers and vehicle 
parts makers.
 
 For example, the Trump administration said wages of U.S.-based engineers could 
be counted toward the regional content quota - benefiting the Detroit Three 
automakers and rivals that have established engineering operations in the United 
States.
 
 (Reporting by David Shepardson and David Lawder in Washington, Dave Graham and 
Ana Isabel Martinez in Mexico City, and Allison Lampert in Montreal; Writing by 
Joseph White; Editing by Matthew Lewis)
 
 
				 
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