USMCA review leaves businesses facing uncertainty
The USMCA trade deal's future is uncertain after its first joint review, risking annual renewals or collapse due to political shifts and Trump's skepticism. Businesses face prolonged instability, disr
The United States, Mexico, and Canada face mounting uncertainty over the future of the USMCA trade deal as its first joint review looms on July 1, wit
Read Full Story at Al Jazeera โWhy This Matters
The potential lapse of the USMCA trade agreement would mark the first major disruption to North Americaโs economic integration since NAFTAโs replacement in 2020, undermining the stability businesses have relied on for supply chain planning and cross-border investment. Without clear renewal terms, sectors from automotive to agriculture face heightened risk of tariffs, regulatory divergence, and retaliatory trade actions that could ripple through global markets.
Background Context
The USMCA, often touted as a modernized NAFTA, was designed with a 16-year sunset clause that includes staggered reviews every six yearsโmeaning the first joint review is now a critical inflection point. Political tensions, particularly the skepticism of the dealโs future under a potential second Trump administration, have cast doubt on whether the agreementโs renewal will be treated as a technical extension or a renegotiation battleground.
What Happens Next
If the USMCA collapses, businesses may scramble to adapt to a patchwork of bilateral trade rules, while lawmakers could face pressure to fast-track alternative frameworksโthough legislative gridlock could delay any swift resolution. Watch for signals from Mexico and Canada on whether they pursue separate deals with the U.S. or seek multilateral alliances to mitigate disruption.
Bigger Picture
This uncertainty reflects a broader retreat from multilateral trade commitments, as nationalist trade policies gain traction in advanced economies and regional blocs like the CPTPP or EU trade deals vie for influence. The outcome could either reinforce fragmentation in global trade or force a recalibration toward more flexible, bilateral agreements in an era of shifting geopolitical alliances.

