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Canada, US Auto Industry Co-Ordinating on Trump Response

Jan. 25, 2017
“We’re a very integrated industry and neither Canada or the U.S. -- or Mexico for that matter -- want to make the whole value chain less efficient,” said Don Walker, CEO  of Magna International Inc. Walker said. “We want to make sure that nothing happens that will inadvertently drive the cost up.”

Automakers and parts manufacturers on both sides of the Canada-U.S. border are meeting state and provincial governments to co-ordinate a response to President Donald Trump as he pushes far-reaching changes to a trade deal that’s crucial to the industry, the head of Canada’s biggest autoparts maker said.

The group has been meeting to put together an analysis of the industry to show how integrated it is and how free trade is key to the competitiveness of manufacturers across North America, said Don Walker, CEO of Magna International Inc. He declined to say who is joining the talks.

“We’re a very integrated industry and neither Canada or the U.S. -- or Mexico for that matter -- want to make the whole value chain less efficient,” Walker told reporters at a conference in Toronto on January 25. “We want to make sure that nothing happens that will inadvertently drive the cost up.”

Manufacturers in Canada and Mexico have been holding their breath to see what changes Trump proposes to the North American Free Trade Agreement. He said on January 22 that he would begin re-negotiating the deal soon and his representatives have had initial meetings with both countries. He’s also promised a “ very major” border tax on companies that move jobs outside the U.S.

A border tax between the U.S. and Canada “makes no sense” given how closely the industry is tied together, a view shared by leaders in Michigan, Ohio and Indiana, Walker said. Those states are key areas of support for Trump, who rallied blue -collar workers to his cause by promising to bring back jobs that had shifted to other countries over the past few decades.

Keeping the status quo between the U.S. and Canada while isolating Mexico wouldn’t be good either, Walker said. Mexico provides a key pool of labor to make autoparts for manufacturers in the U.S. and Canada, he said.

“If you’re cut off from that then you’re going to go buy it from China,” Walker said. “It’s actually an advantage for the automotive industry to have all three countries working together.”

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