Building a Partnership with Mexico

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Transcription:

Building a Partnership with Mexico E. Anthony Wayne Career Ambassador (ret.) Public Policy Fellow, Wilson Center Texas and NAFTA, SMU, 10/17 wayneea@gmail.com @EAnthonyWayne

Building a Partnership with Mexico U.S.-Mexico ties touch more U.S. lives daily than any other country via trade, border connections, tourism, and family ties. The same is true for Mexico. An estimated 35 million U.S. citizens are of Mexican heritage. Share a 1990-mile border (3,201 km) & adjoining environment. In recent years, government-to-government collaboration has been unprecedented.

Managing a Massive Relationship

US-Mexico Trade 2016 Trade in goods and services: US trades over 1 million per minute with Mexico. Currency in USD. Source: USTR, 2016.

US-Mexico Trade Mexico is the US : 2nd largest export market 3rd largest trading partner 3 rd largest Ag export market: $18 billion in 2016 1 st or 2 nd export market for 29 U.S. States 1 st export market for U.S. Southern Border States

U.S.-Mexico Border States The U.S.-Mexico Border States GDP would constitute the 4th economy in the world and would represent over 25% of both countries total GDP.

US-Mexico Border Crossings Each day there are over 1 million border crossings. Each day, over 490 thousand (47% of the total) take place through Ports of Entry in Texas. Source: Bureau of transportation statistics, 2016.

US-Mexico Visitors In 2016, the number of overnight visitors from U.S. to Mexico was 25 million. The number of overnight visitors from Mexico to the U.S. was 18 million. Together they spent over $34 billion. 7.7 million Mexicans visit Texas and spend $4.5 billion every year. Source: Bureau of transportation statistics, 2016; National Travel and Tourism Office, 2016; The Wilson Center, 2016.

1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 Source: The Wilson Center, Charting a new course, 2017; US Census Bureau, 2016; BEA, 2016. U.S. Trade with Mexico has multiplied by 6 since 1993 The U.S. sells more to Mexico than to all the BRICS countries together. 700,000.0 600,000.0 500,000.0 400,000.0 300,000.0 200,000.0 100,000.0 0.0 35% Since 2010 Total goods Total services

Source: The Wilson Center, 2015. Rank Order: Top US States Trade with Mexico 2015 State Volume $USD (Billions) State Volume $USD (Billions) Texas 178 Georgia 9.7 California 71.9 Pennsylvania 8.4 Michigan 55 Florida 8.3 Illinois 22.2 Kentucky 8.3 Arizona 16.8 North Carolina 7.7 Ohio 14.7 New Jersey 7.4 Tennessee 12 Louisiana 7.3 Indiana 10.1 New York 6.8

Texas-Mexico Trade Total trade = $178 Billion (more than US trade with its #5 partner: Germany = $164B) $487.6 million a day $20.3 million an hour $338.6 thousand a minute

US Border States Exports to Mexico Texas is the top exporting U.S. state to Mexico 100 $1.6 billion exports to Mexico $8.3 billion exports to Mexico $25.3 billion exports to Mexico $91.7 billion exports to Mexico 80 60 43% of the total value of exports 38% of the total value of exports 15% of the total value of exports 37% of the total value of exports 40 20 0 New Mexico Arizona California Texas Source: US Census, 2016.

Exports from Texas to Mexico by Industry (% of total trade) Others 31% Agricultural Products 2% Computer and electronic products 26% Source: The Wilson Center, 2015. Electrical equipment 8% Chemicals 9% Transportation equipment 12% Petroleum and coal products 12%

More U.S. Content in Imports from Mexico than Others 45% 40% 35% 30% 25% 20% 15% 40% 25% Value of U.S. Content in Manufactured Imports from Selected Economies 10% 5% 0% 8% 5% 4% 3% 2% 2% 2% 1% Mexico Canada Malaysia Korea China Brazil European Union Japan India Russia Source: Robert Koopman et al. Give Credit Where Credit is Due: Tracing Value Added in Global Production Chains. NBER Working Paper No 16426.

Source: United States Department of Agriculture, 2016. Leading U.S. States Exporting Agricultural Products to Mexico Ohio Minnesota Illinois Kansas Missouri Nebraska Louisiana Iowa California Texas 3.7 0 0.5 1 1.5 2 2.5 3 3.5 4 Billions

Mexico Trade supports 5 million U.S. jobs 5 million US jobs depend on trade with Mexico, compared to an estimated 700,000 jobs in 1993. Source: The Wilson Center, 2016; Clinton Administration Statement on the NAFTA, 1993. Over 1 million U.S. Border State jobs (382,000 Texas jobs) depend on trade with Mexico.

Source: Wilson Center, 2016. U.S. Jobs Created by Mexican Investment Mexican investment supports 123,000 US jobs (20,000 jobs in Texas).

Border Management Licit and Illicit Flows

Moving toward Co-Management of the Border

Moving from blame to shared responsibilities Making the border more open to legitimate travel and commerce. Working to align customs regulatory frameworks; moving toward a North American single customs platform. New mechanisms to communicate, coordinate and more effectively counter illicit trade and travel: drugs, guns, money and people. Steps to increase security and reduce cross-border violence. New programs to share information on potential border crossers, including via shared border radio-frequency identification system. Working to create a Trilateral Trusted Traveler Program.

Net Migration from Mexico In 2016, there were 1.3 million less unauthorized Mexican immigrants in the US than in 2007 3000 2,940 2500 2000 1500 1000 500 670 1,390 1,370 1,000 870 0 Source: Pew Research, 2017 95 to '00 05 to '10 09 to '14 U.S. to Mexico Mexico to the U.S.

USBP Southwest Border Total Apprehensions 50,000 45,000 40,000 43,249 35,000 30,000 25,000 33,723 31,584 22,293 20,000 15,000 18,198 10,000 5,000 11,125 0 Source: U.S. Border Patrol Monthly Apprehensions (FY 2000 - FY 2016)

Source: Unidad de Politica Migratoria, 2015; CBP Border Security Report FY 2015 Migrant Apprehensions: US-Mexico Cooperation Deportations by Mexico 175,136 Apprehensions by the U.S. 134,572

Security and Justice Issues

US-Mexico Law Enforcement/Security Cooperation Mérida Initiative Programs & Agency-to-Agency Cooperation Defense Dialogues & Cooperation Security Coordination Group

Mérida Initiative: Evolving 1. Disrupting the operational capacity of organized crime. 2. Institutionalizing reforms to sustain the rule of law and respect for human rights in Mexico. 3. Creating a 21st Century Border. 4. Building strong and resilient communities. $2.6 billion appropriated by the US since 2008. $1.6 billion already spent on training and equipment via over 100 programs. Mexico has spent over 10 times more.

Opioids Change the Game

Drugs Involved in US Overdose Deaths 2000-2016 20200 15200 10200 5200 20,145 15,446 14,427 10,619 7,663 3,314 200-4800 Fentanyl and Fentanyl Analogues Heroin Prescription Opioids Cocaine Meth Methadone Source: CDC Wonder Database; CDC Provisional Counts of Drug Overdose Deaths as of 8/6/2017

2014 Death Rates for Drug Poisoning Source: CDC/NCHS, National Vital Statistics System, 2014. Designed by L. Rossen, B.Bastian & Y. Chong

Sources: The Globalist, The White House, CDC. U.S. Opioid Crisis Opium derivatives use: over 5% of the U.S. population in 2013. Since 1999, overdose deaths involving opioids has quadrupled. Opium and heroin production in Mexico has grown substantially, as has transshipment of illicit opioids, e.g., Fentanyl, from China. In 2016, Presidents Peña Nieto and Obama launched a working group on drugs and dismantling criminal networks.

2017 Agreements to Combat Illicit Drug Trade Partner to destroy criminal organizations. Address the demand for illicit drugs among US citizens. We have one common objective to end the tragic impacts of illicit drug trade on both sides of our border, Secretary Tillerson Necessary tools: physical barriers, technology, patrolling, eradication, enhanced law enforcement and justice actions, and anti-addiction programs. Go after all elements in the chain: means of production, cross-border distribution networks, flows of cash and profits, weapons procurement. It s a multifaceted problem it needs multifaceted solutions, Secretary Kelly

Violence up in Mexico: Mexican Strategy and Tactics?

January 16 February March April May June July August September October November December January 17 February March April May June July August Homicides in Mexico 2600 2400 2200 2000 1800 1600 1400 January-August 2017: 18,637 killings: up 27% from the same period in 2016. June 2017: the most violent month in the last 20 years. Law enforcement appears overwhelmed; cartels fighting; types of crime expanded, e.g. oil theft; more states affected. Source: Secretaria Ejecutiva de Seguridad Nacional, El financier & Dallas Morning News, 2017 Revised U.S. travel warning for vacation spots.

NAFTA

U.S. NAFTA Modernization Objectives Controversial topics include: Focus on reducing trade deficit. Eliminate chapter 19 dispute settlement mechanism, and otherwise preserve United States freedom to enforce rigorously its trade laws. Keep in place preferential purchasing programs such as Buy America. Eliminate the Investor-to-State Dispute Settlement (ISDS) mechanism. Proposals to strengthen rules of origin and incentives to ensure greater sourcing of products in US. Sunset clause.

Third Round of NAFTA Renegotiations Progress Small and medium-sized businesses Competition policy Digital trade State Owned Enterprises Sanitary and Phytosanitary measures Customs Telecommunications Protections and rights for Mexican workers Fourth Round in DC on October 11-17 Expected US Proposals Ways to reduce US trade deficit Minimum amount of U.S. content in autos Elimination of Chapter 19 dispute resolution mechanism Sunset clause

% Source: The Chicago Council on Global Affairs Overall, Is NAFTA Good for the US Economy? 75 70 65 60 55 50 45 40 35 30 71 53 50 34 2008 2013 2017 Overall Republican Democrat Independent

% Fair Source: The Chicago Council on Global Affairs Do You Think Mexico Practices Fair or Unfair Trade with US? (% Fair) 65 60 55 50 45 40 35 30 25 60 50 47 28 2002 2006 2008 2010 2012 2017 Overall Republican Democrat Independent

A Strong Partnership with Mexico

Opportunities from a Border Region Perspective As Mexico s largest trading partner, Texas has a tremendous amount to win or to lose: manufacturing, energy, agriculture. Press for attention to border infrastructure and facilitation: use combined border state clout so a consistent chorus is heard by Congress, Governors, and Cabinet Secretaries. Border facilitation improvements: Build in a commitment to on-going bilateral work to improve border crossing times and procedures; trilateral work to adopt best practices, including consistent regulations, processes and rules.

Opportunities from a Border Region Perspective Border Infrastructure: Build in reference to the importance of modern border infrastructure and sufficient staffing. Seek more efficient and better coordinated bi-national planning mechanisms, and trilateral planning where relevant, for example on transportation corridors. Develop federal, state and local strategies: Form a border alliance to talk with the federal governments about resource needs and policies that have effect all along the border.

Tasks Ahead from a Border Region Perspective Economic development: Champion coordinated multi-year regional plans with local, State and Federal buy-in. Improve communication and coordination between local and federal governments of both sides of the border. Regularly convene stakeholders to share know-how. Institutionalize regional alliances and bilateral relationships. Organize coordinated outreach plans to sell the economic and security importance of the border region. Speak out for Texas! Think big: competing with global producers; Industry 4.0 ahead.

U.S.-Mexico Tasks Ahead Trade: Successfully complete NAFTA modernization negotiations. Bilateral Security Cooperation: Better manage migration and travel; intercept terrorists. Better fight organized crime, attacking production, distribution, logistics, finance networks, arms smuggling, and addiction/demand. Continue to support Central America; partner with others. Deepen military-to-military cooperation and partnership. Improve Competitiveness: Enhance technology, information sharing and processes to improve security and facilitation of legitimate trade and travel. Invest in programs, including education, to further develop the complimentary nature of the two economies, create jobs and improve global competitiveness.

Building a Partnership with Mexico E. Anthony Wayne Career Ambassador (ret.) Public Policy Fellow at the Wilson Center Texas and NAFTA, SMU, Dallas 10/17 wayneea@gmail.com @EAnthonyWayne