Top US trade official sees progress in helping workers. Voters will
decide if her approach continues
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[October 07, 2024] By
JOSH BOAK
WASHINGTON (AP) — As the U.S. trade representative, Katherine Tai is
legally required to avoid discussing the presidential election. But her
ideas about fair trade are on the ballot in November.
Voters are essentially being asked to decide whether it is best to work
with the rest of the world or threaten it. Do they favor pursuing worker
protections in trade talks, as Tai has done on behalf of the
Biden-Harris administration? Or should the United States jack up taxes
on almost everything it imports as Donald Trump has pledged to do?
After nearly four years in her job, Tai feels she is making progress on
getting the U.S. and its trade partners to focus more on workers’
rights. Decades of trade deals often prioritized keeping costs low by
finding cheap labor that could, in some cases, be exploited.
“You can’t do trade policy by yourself,” Tai said in an interview with
The Associated Press. “I am confident that the path that we are on is
the right path to be on. I think the only question is how much progress
we are able to make in these next years.”
It is an approach that has drawn criticism from business leaders,
economists and Republicans who say that the U.S. has not made enough
progress on new trade partnerships and countering China's rise.
“There have been no trade deals, no talks to expand free trade
agreements,” Rep. Carol Miller, R-W.Va., said in an April congressional
hearing with Tai. “Compared to China’s ambitious agenda, the United
States is falling behind in every region in the world.”
Trump says that broad tariffs of at least 20% on all imports -– and
possibly even higher on some products from China and Mexico -– would
bring back American factory jobs. Most economists say they would hurt
economic growth and raise inflation, though the former president has
dismissed those concerns.
“If you’re a foreign country and you don’t make your product here, then
you will have to pay a tariff, a fairly substantial one, which will go
into our treasury, will reduce taxes,” Trump, the Republican
presidential nominee this year, said at a recent rally in Erie,
Pennsylvania.
An Ivy League background and a blue-collar perspective
Tai has degrees from Yale University and Harvard Law School, but strives
for a blue-collar perspective on trade. She said that she has injected
once-excluded labor union voices into the trade process.
The Biden-Harris administration has not rejected tariffs. It kept the
ones on China from Trump's presidency. It has imposed a 100% tariff on
Chinese electric vehicles, even though there is not much of a U.S.
market for these vehicles that can cost, without tariffs, as little as
$12,000. Tai sees that as a way to shield an emerging industry against
subsidized and unfair competition.
But the administration also is looking to bolster U.S. workers in the
face of competition from China through other industrial policies, such
as funding for computer chip factories and tax breaks for technology in
renewable energy sources.
The reality, according to some economists, is that domestic factories
did not simply lose jobs to China. There were productivity gains that
meant some manufacturers needed fewer employers and there was a broader
shift as more workers moved away from manufacturing and into the
services sector. Those factors often get less emphasis from Tai, said
Mary Lovely, a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International
Economics.
“It seems to me that she’s focusing on the easy one — the one where you
can blame the ’bad guy,’ China,” Lovely said.
There is unfinished work.
The trade pillar of the Indo-Pacific Economic Framework spearheaded by
Tai remains incomplete. That effort by Washington and its allies in Asia
is meant to counterbalance China’s ascendance without needing a trade
deal, but it puts more of a focus on workers' rights and environmental
protections than past proposals.
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U.S. Trade Representative Katherine Tai speaks during a media
briefing at the State Department, Sept. 29, 2023, in Washington. (AP
Photo/Mark Schiefelbein, File)
“What I have discovered is that we
actually all want the same thing,” Tai said. “Fundamentally, what
we’re doing is innovating the way you do trade policy, innovating
the way globalization is going to play out into the future.”
Tai said she is trying to foster a trade policy with other countries
that “allows for us to build our middle class together and to stop
pitting them against each other, because that’s been the model we’ve
been pursuing for the last several decades.”
William Reinsch at the Center for Strategic and International
Studies said it is not surprising that Asian countries involved in
the initiative would say they support their middle-class workers.
But he saidt Democrats have not provided the access to U.S. markets
that trade partners want in return for the focus on workers.
“The consistent message we have gotten from the Asian partners is
that they are looking for tangible benefits, and the U.S. is not
providing any,” he said. “Trying to rearrange the traditional social
order, however meritorious that would be, can be an uphill battle.”
The revised North American trade agreement is a model
Tai sees herself as having a proof of concept that her approach to
trade can thrive. It just happens to come from the
U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement, the revised North American trade deal
signed during the Trump administration and cited by Trump as
evidence that he knows how to negotiate with the rest of the world.
In her interview, Tai said the agreement includes a “rapid response
mechanism” that enables the government to penalize factories that
violate workers’ rights. Tai said that as of late September, the
U.S. government has invoked the mechanism 28 times and concluded 25
of those efforts.
Tai said that has directly benefited 30,000 Mexican workers who
could elect their own union representation, allowing them to receive
higher wages, back pay and other benefits.
“We are empowering workers through trade,” she said. “And by
empowering Mexico’s workers, we are ensuring that America’s workers
do not have to compete with workers in our neighboring country who
are being exploited and who are being deprived of rights.”
Praise for the agreement appears to be a rare point of convergence
on trade between Trump and the Biden-Harris administration. But
their perspectives are different. Trump tells voters that his
threats of massive tariffs can cause foreign governments to accept
America's terms on trade and immigration.
“I ended NAFTA, the worst trade deal ever made and replaced it with
the USMCA, the best trade deal ever made," he said Monday, referring
to the North America Free Trade Agreement signed by Democratic
President Bill Clinton.
Tai, barred by the federal Hatch Act from weighing in on the
presidential campaign from her office, is cautious in her remarks.
But she disputes Trump's claim.
She notes that there were actually two negotiations on trade with
Canada and Mexico. The first negotiation was among the Trump
administration and the other two nations. But the second was between
Trump’s team and congressional Democrats who needed to ratify the
deal and that led to worker protections, a component Tai worked on
when she was a congressional staffer.
But then, she added, just getting a written deal on trade
protections and rights is never enough. The text needs to be backed
up by action.
“They’re just words on the page unless it’s implemented,” she said.
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