According to www.axios.com, the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA) faces a critical juncture ahead of its mandatory joint review deadline on July 1, with financial analysts assigning only a 10% probability to full renewal and a 15% chance of complete withdrawal.
Mounting Bilateral Tensions Threaten Trilateral Stability
The USMCA — which replaced NAFTA in 2020 and maintains much of its integrated production architecture — is now under unprecedented strain. Trade experts and lawyers warn that the agreement could implode, disrupting one of the world’s most deeply woven manufacturing economies. A collapse would directly affect supply chains supporting affordable car production, crude oil deliveries to Midwest refineries, and natural gas distribution to West Coast homes.
Core Disputes Driving the Rift
- U.S. officials seek to prevent China from using Mexico or Canada as a back door into North American markets — a position that clashes with Canada’s recent limited tariff truce with Beijing;
- Most Canadian provinces have banned U.S. wine and liquor from retail shelves in response to Trump-era tariffs on steel, aluminum, and autos;
- Negotiations have fractured bilaterally: U.S. officials held talks with Mexico’s top economic officials while sidelining Canada, raising concerns about separate deals with each neighbor.
Escalating Rhetoric and Leadership Critiques
Deputy U.S. Trade Representative Rick Switzer stated at a Council on Foreign Relations event last week:
“We have issues with Mexico we’re still working through, but Mexico intends on coming to an agreement with us.”
He added:
“The grown-ups are in the room talking because there’s a grown-up in leadership there. And I would argue there’s not a grown-up in Canada in charge,”
referring to Prime Minister Mark Carney, the former Bank of England governor who assumed office in 2023.
Meanwhile, Jamieson Greer, Trump’s top trade official, told lawmakers last week:
“There are two countries that have retaliated economically against the United States in the past year: the People’s Republic of China and Canada.”
Economic Stakes and Industry Warnings
Foreign automakers have warned the Trump administration they may withdraw their cheapest vehicle models from the U.S. market if USMCA is not renewed — a threat reported by the Wall Street Journal on Monday. This risk compounds the fact that USMCA has shielded the U.S. from tariff pain by exempting the bulk of Mexican and Canadian goods from Trump’s high levies — a protection built upon NAFTA’s foundational integration since the early 1990s.
Carney pushed back forcefully, telling the Canadian Broadcasting Corp on Monday:
“A lot of countries rushed into [trade] deals with the U.S. They weren’t really worth the paper they were written on.”
He also labeled Trump’s tariffs on steel, aluminum, and autos as
“more than irritants. Those are violations of our trade deal.”
Market Assessment and Investor Uncertainty
In a note issued earlier this month, investment bank Jefferies assigned a 75% probability that USMCA enters a decade of annual reviews — a state of prolonged limbo that “lowers conviction of businesses and investors,” according to the firm’s analysts. The report further states that the 15% risk of full U.S. withdrawal “should not be discounted simply because of its severity.” These figures reflect mounting concern among supply chain professionals about inventory planning, cross-border customs compliance, and nearshoring cost modeling — particularly for Tier-1 auto suppliers operating across all three countries.
Source: www.axios.com
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.










