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U.S. and Mexico target GM labor 'violations,' testing new trade deal

Published 05/12/2021, 05:03 AM
Updated 05/12/2021, 01:06 PM
© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: Workers arrive for a shift at the GM truck assembly plant amid the outbreak of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19), in Silao, Mexico May 22, 2020. REUTERS/Sergio Maldonado

© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: Workers arrive for a shift at the GM truck assembly plant amid the outbreak of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19), in Silao, Mexico May 22, 2020. REUTERS/Sergio Maldonado

By David Lawder, David Shepardson and Daina Beth Solomon

WASHINGTON (Reuters) -The United States is testing powers to protect workers under the trade deal replacing NAFTA and asked Mexico on Wednesday to probe alleged abuses at a General Motors Co (NYSE:GM) factory, a move that may put tariffs on some of the firm's profitable pickups.

U.S. Trade Representative Katherine Tai said her office and the Department of Labor received "information appearing to indicate serious violations" of worker rights in an April union contract vote at GM's Silao factory in central Mexico.

Tai said she will partner with the Mexican government to try to "prevent a race to the bottom" for U.S. and Mexican workers.

Mexico's leftist president welcomed the action, crediting provisions in the new U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA) trade deal that aim to strengthen Mexican unions and slow migration of U.S. auto production south of the border.

"It's a good thing. Before, the trade deal did not look at the labor situation," President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador said at a regular news conference.

Mexico's labor ministry has already said it found "serious irregularities" in the union-led vote by the GM Silao plant's 6,000 union workers to ratify a labor contract and ordered a new vote within 30 days. Officials have said some ballots were destroyed.

Labor remedies under USMCA include revoking tariff-free access for the violating factory's goods. In GM's case, that could mean applying a 25% U.S. pickup truck import tariff on Silao-made trucks, a move that could add thousands of dollars to each vehicle's cost.

GM said it will cooperate with the U.S. and Mexican governments and that it condemned violations of labor rights including actions to restrict collective bargaining.

The so-called request for review marks the first use of the Rapid Response Labor Mechanism in USMCA, which allows countries to target labor rights violations at specific factories. Tai helped negotiate the labor enforcement mechanism on behalf of Democrats in the U.S. Congress.

GM won key changes to USMCA that allowed it to continue to build hundreds of thousands of high-profit pickups in Mexico for export to the United States annually.

In a statement, Tai praised Mexico "for stepping in to suspend the vote when it became aware of voting irregularities" and said the U.S. action "will complement Mexico’s efforts to ensure that these workers can fully exercise their collective bargaining rights."

Under NAFTA, Mexican factory wages stagnated for more than two decades, in part because of a union system that made it hard for workers to organize freely. Mexico's minimum wage of less than a $1 an hour is the lowest among the OECD group of industrial economies.

Despite the new USMCA powers, a domestic labor reform, and government hikes to minimum wages, Mexican workers are expected to earn far less than U.S. peers for the foreseeable future.

PROFIT CENTER

GM's Silao plant https://www.reuters.com/article/us-trade-nafta-autos/game-of-chicken-gm-bets-on-mexican-made-pickup-trucks-idUSKBN1F42G7 is a linchpin of its North American truck strategy, producing more than 339,000 Chevrolet Silverado and GMC Sierra full-sized pickup trucks in 2019. That was more than a third of the company's total of 906,000 that year.

"We do not believe there was any GM involvement in the alleged violations or that any government-approved inspectors were denied access to the facility, and have retained a third-party firm to conduct an independent and thorough review," the company said in a statement.

USTR's request comes days before U.S. President Joe Biden travels to Dearborn, Michigan, to tour a Ford Motor (NYSE:F) Co electric vehicle plant to highlight his push for $174 billion in government funding to expand electric vehicle production and charging infrastructure.

Ford builds all of its U.S. full-size pickup trucks in the United States but both GM and Ford are investing in electric vehicle production in Mexico, prompting the United Auto Workers union to call for tax incentives to apply only to U.S.-assembled EVs.

White House spokeswoman Jen Psaki declined to say on Tuesday if Biden supported limiting EV subsidies.

Tai's request warns all automakers - including Ford, Volkswagen (DE:VOWG_p) and Chrysler parent Stellantis - that the Biden administration will not tolerate past Mexican labor practices that critics say kept wages depressed.

In cases of workplace violations at factories that export to the United States, Lopez Obrador said the two governments would establish a dialog and intervene so that rights were respected.

© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: Workers arrive for a shift at the GM truck assembly plant amid the outbreak of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19), in Silao, Mexico May 22, 2020. REUTERS/Sergio Maldonado

If the United States and Mexico cannot reach an agreement to resolve the matter, Tai can request a dispute settlement panel to review the matter, with the entire process meant to take about 90 days from the initial request.

Tai has requested that the U.S. Treasury immediately suspend final settlement of customs accounts for U.S. border entry of GM's Silao trucks, a move that preserves the option to apply tariffs to them later.

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