Thank you.
It's my pleasure to be here today before the House of Commons standing committee to testify on CUSMA and the joint review in 2026.
I'm a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution, where I lead the USMCA initiative. This initiative was established shortly after the overwhelming bipartisan support for the agreement in Congress, where we saw an opportunity in this vote and its support by key U.S. labour unions to reset the conversation around North American economic integration.
We've done this by providing a tracker of all the trade investment and jobs from North America trade across all states, provinces and countries. For instance, we've found that CUSMA supports approximately 17 million jobs across North America.
We also track the parties' compliance with their CUSMA obligations and have established a scorecard that allows us to compare compliance by each government and assess how far each government is from compliance. It's actually my pleasure to report to you that the Canadian government is the least non-compliant party to CUSMA.
We also produce reports and analysis, including our annual “USMCA Forward” report, which assesses progress each year and looks forward to what more can be done to to build a more competitive, inclusive and sustainable economic relationship across North America.
We've had the honour of contributions from a number of very senior cabinet ministers, including Minister Ng, Minister Champagne and Minister Wilkinson, in addition to business leaders such as Paul Desmarais Jr., CEO of Power Corporation, and Goldy Hyder, president of the Business Council of Canada, as well as other Canadian thought leaders from civil society and academia.
This is clearly a pivotal time for the United States and the world when it comes to international trade. The current system of world trade, which is based on the WTO, is being challenged by geopolitical competition, heightened risks from dependence on trade with countries such as China, and unfair competition.
North American trade and investment ties have always been critical for the prosperity of Canada, the U.S. and Mexico. CUSMA is the agreement around which this economic co-operation is based. More than a traditional trade agreement, it is a blueprint to realize the potential of an integrated, competitive North American region. Since it was signed three and a half years ago, it has contributed to boosting trade and investment across the region, creating thousands of jobs and raising labour standards.
I know this is not news to you, but worth stating for the record is that CUSMA is the most important trade agreement for all three countries. In Canada, 78% of exports go to its North American partners, over 85% of Mexico's exports go to its North American partners, and around 30% of U.S. exports go to Mexico and Canada, which is over four times the U.S. exports to China. A lot of this is in intermediate goods crossing back and forth to make complex goods like cars, medical equipment, IT products, pharmaceuticals and more.
In 2023, trade in North America was about $1.85 trillion, or about $3 million a minute. There's been a 47% increase in North American trade since 2020, when CUSMA came into effect. Since 2020, an estimated additional four million jobs have been created across North America, on top of the total of 17 million jobs noted before. The economic importance of CUSMA is clear.
I want to turn briefly now to the geopolitical importance of CUSMA.
On the one hand, the last few years have shown us some of the risks as well as the resiliency of supply chains across North America. COVID-19 showed the risks of relying on China for medical equipment compared with the strong performance of North American supply chains in delivering on medical equipment and more.
Russia's invasion of Ukraine has impacted trade in agricultural commodities and demonstrated the global trade impacts of even localized conflict.
Trade relations have been fundamentally rethought in light of geopolitical competition with China. This is due to a number of challenges, including the need to respond to China's economic model, which provides enormous subsidies to manufacturing, which leads to an oversupply of products—increasingly in high-tech areas such as EVs. With low domestic demand, the result of this economic model is increasing reliance by China on exports to North America and Europe, in particular, to absorb the excess production.
China has also demonstrated that when countries rely on it as a source of supply or as a market for its exports, China will use this leverage to coerce co-operation to achieve other political objectives. The U.S. talks about de-risking trade with China by creating alternative sources of supply, particularly for products that are critical for economic and national security, but to de-risk will require even closer North American co-operation, even more trade and investment, and a bigger vision for what we can achieve together on climate, digital, labour, worker training and more. This is where CUSMA is so important, both economically and as a geostrategic opportunity.
Let me now turn to the joint review briefly. I'm not going to list what the joint review will require, but I just want to make the following points.
Failure to renew CUSMA in 2026 will increase business uncertainty, increasing the risk and cost of investment, and thus reduce the trade needed to achieve the economic and geostrategic goals outlined below.
Between now and 2026, there will be elections in the United States and in Canada. The outcome of the U.S. presidential election is perhaps the most important in determining whether there will be a successful renewal in 2026. What is clear is that for whoever is in the White House, the need for renewal of CUSMA will be used to push for resolution of specific trade issues.
The joint review provides an opportunity to develop a forward-looking agenda on what the three countries can do to strengthen North American competitiveness, build more secure and more resilient supply chains, make progress on building a more digitally aligned North American market, and further develop North America as a source of investment stability and strength when it comes to geostrategic competition with China.
To achieve this will require addressing outstanding trade irritants, where possible, before the joint review. Bringing outstanding issues arising from past CUSMA disputes into the joint review would risk missing this opportunity to use the joint review to build a forward agenda and increase the risk that we will not achieve renewal of the agreement in 2026.
Thank you. I look forward to answering any further questions you may have.