NAFTA Collapse Would Hurt Mexico Most

 | Oct 19, 2017 10:19

The collapse of the North American Free Trade Agreement would likely damage yet not derail the continent’s economy and business models of global corporations.

That’s the conclusion of economists trying to envisage life after the 23-year-old accord as increasingly tense negotiations over how to revamp it fuel speculation that U.S. President Donald Trump will follow through on his threat to withdraw.

Without NAFTA, the U.S. and Mexico would charge each other the higher tariffs they now levy on other members of the World Trade Organization. Those run as high as 7 percent on average in Mexico and 3.5 percent in the U.S., although Canada and America may be able to fall back on a pre-Nafta free-trade deal.

An increase in duties would potentially hurt growth, cost jobs and spur inflation for all three nations, with Bloomberg Intelligence and Moody’s Analytics predicting Mexico would be the hardest hit.