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July 25, 2019

The Canada-United States-Mexico Agreement (CUSMA) will help the Trump administration fulfill some of its economic objectives, but stands to shrink GDP and lower economic welfare throughout the North American region, according to a new report from the C.D. Howe Institute.

In “Quantifying CUSMA: The Economic Consequences of the New North American Trade Regime” authors Dan Ciuriak, Ali Dadkhah and Jingling Xiao note key measures of the agreement generate net benefits for the U.S. at Canada’s expense. These include more stringent rules of origin that must be met for products to qualify for duty-free market access under the CUSMA, increased intellectual property protection, and the introduction of new rules on cross-border data flows and data localization.

The report concludes the negative elements of CUSMA outweigh the positives and will result in lower real GDP and welfare for all three parties, though it leaves all three marginally better off than under a scenario in which NAFTA lapsed. Under CUSMA, Mexico is hardest hit and the United States the least. Canada’s real GDP stands to shrink by -0.4 percent and economic welfare to fall by over US$10 billion.

Dan Ciuriak

Dan Ciuriak is Fellow in Residence with the C.D. Howe Institute. He also holds fellowships with the Centre for International Governance Innovation (Waterloo) and  the Asia Pacific Foundation of Canada (Vancouver) and is Director and Principal, Ciuriak Consulting Inc. (Ottawa).

Ali Dadkhah

Ali Dadkhah is a practising lawyer and a member of the British Columbia Bar. He obtained a Masters in International Law and Economics in 2012 from the World Trade Institute, University of Bern, Switzerland.

Jingliang Xiao

Jingliang Xiao is a research associate responsible for policy modelling at Ciuriak Consulting Inc.