USMCA Shifts to Annual Reviews: Why the U.S. Traded Predictability for Leverage

The U.S. lets the 16-year USMCA extension deadline pass, opting for rolling annual talks. Experts break down what this means for “predictability” and the leverage needed for disputes.

The U.S. allowed the July 1 deadline for renewing the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA) to pass, which means the 16-year ‘safety net’ for North American trade is officially off the table. The agreement will remain in force, but by allowing the July 1 USMCA extension deadline to pass, the U.S. has traded long-term predictability for short-term leverage, moving the pact into a rolling cycle of annual reviews until an agreement is reached in writing to extend USMCA or the pact reaches its endpoint in July 2036.

This move is not a surprise. President Donald Trump and Vice President J.D. Vance have both signaled for weeks that the administration would pursue a different path than a straight extension.

Officials and trade analysts say the process matters because it affects long-term predictability for businesses and supply chains — especially in sectors tied closely to rules on autos, steel, agriculture and cross-border manufacturing.

Farm Groups Worry About Stretched Out Negotiations

For farm groups, the uncertainty is less about an immediate “cliff” and more about what happens if negotiations stretch on. Brian Kuehl, executive director of Farmers for Free Trade, says the situation is essentially “kicking the can” down the road.

“It would be a lot better for the countries to say, OK, let’s lock it in for another 16 years, which is the time frame, if they reach agreement. Then you’ve got 16 years of stability,” Kuehl says.

That stability comes from tariff-free trade, and Kuehl is confident the U.S. is not going to exit the deal because there is too much at stake.

“I think there’s virtually no chance the U.S. would pull out of the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement. I mean, it’s $1.8 trillion worth of trade between the three countries,” he explains.

President Trump states he wants to end USMCA because the U.S. can get a better deal. There are sticking points farm groups would like to see improved upon.

The American Farm Bureau Federation (AFBF, which is part of a broader coalition that supports USMCA, says the agreement still has issues “around the edges” that could be improved through future negotiations, including faster dispute settlement mechanisms.

“I think our Southern farmers have some issues around seasonality ... and our dairy farmers have issues with the TRQ [tariff-rate quotas] access that they’ve been provided,” says John Newton, vice president of public policy and economic analysis for AFBF.

Even with the deadline missed, Kuehl predicts the countries will meet over the next 30 to 60 days and come to an agreement to permanently extend the treaty.

“This isn’t a dramatic day, but we don’t want to see this uncertainty continue for another six months,” Kuehl says. “The countries need to roll up their sleeves, do their work and get this thing moving forward.”

Annual reviews are separate from a termination clause that any party could trigger to leave within six months.

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