Why is the USMCA deal better than the NAFTA deal? US exports to Mexico are down. US imports from Mexico are up. Production is shifted from the US to Mexico. Didn't Trump say that the new deal would be fair and stop this?
If you're comparing averages than you should it compare Trump's one, which is $362 billion USD. Higher than Obama's record.
USMCA came into effect in July 2020
And yet companies are still moving to Mexico. Ford recently with Ohio. Toyota will move the Tacoma production to Mexico ... and so on. Seems like the USMCA deal has no influence on that. Why? Isn't it the best trade deal ever?
Trump brands himself as anti-globalist negotiating "fair" trade deals while he almost doubled the trade deficit with Mexico, hit record high trade deficits with China and record high overall trade deficits ($900 billion trade deficit in 2020, highest on record). Wow. Such a tough guy on trade. Signing one sham deal after another.
The most remarkable of all was in 2020 when it dropped by 10% without NAFTA
Dude. China was never part of NAFTA. What are you talking about? You have absolutely no clue what's going on.
America's record-high employment levels in 2019 right around the time Trump
And what happened then in 2020 under Trump? Record high unemployment. Trump left office with less Americans working than on the beginning on his term.
What would you do if you were President?
Not sign a sham deal negotiated by Wall Street bankers (Trump's secretary of commerce was a Rothschild banker and his secretary of finance was Goldman Sachs banker) and then parading around like the USMCA trade deal is the second coming of Christ.
The USMCA deal is worse than NAFTA as you can see. Companies still leave America, trade deficits with Mexico are increasing faster than ever and American workers are getting shafted. Well done Trump. If I were a globalist, I would applaud Trump for signing this deal.
As high as under Obama.
They didn't increase. Down by 10% during Trumps term.
https://www.census.gov/foreign-trade/balance/c2010.html
Why is the USMCA deal better than the NAFTA deal? US exports to Mexico are down. US imports from Mexico are up. Production is shifted from the US to Mexico. Didn't Trump say that the new deal would be fair and stop this?
If you're comparing averages than you should it compare Trump's one, which is $362 billion USD. Higher than Obama's record.
And yet companies are still moving to Mexico. Ford recently with Ohio. Toyota will move the Tacoma production to Mexico ... and so on. Seems like the USMCA deal has no influence on that. Why? Isn't it the best trade deal ever?
Trump brands himself as anti-globalist negotiating "fair" trade deals while he almost doubled the trade deficit with Mexico, hit record high trade deficits with China and record high overall trade deficits ($900 billion trade deficit in 2020, highest on record). Wow. Such a tough guy on trade. Signing one sham deal after another.
Dude. China was never part of NAFTA. What are you talking about? You have absolutely no clue what's going on.
And what happened then in 2020 under Trump? Record high unemployment. Trump left office with less Americans working than on the beginning on his term.
Not sign a sham deal negotiated by Wall Street bankers (Trump's secretary of commerce was a Rothschild banker and his secretary of finance was Goldman Sachs banker) and then parading around like the USMCA trade deal is the second coming of Christ.
The USMCA deal is worse than NAFTA as you can see. Companies still leave America, trade deficits with Mexico are increasing faster than ever and American workers are getting shafted. Well done Trump. If I were a globalist, I would applaud Trump for signing this deal.