type: timeline_event
The North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) enters into force on January 1, 1994, eliminating most tariffs on products traded between the United States, Canada and Mexico. Over the next decade, NAFTA will cause the loss of 879,280 U.S. jobs through 2002, with 78% (686,700 jobs) concentrated in high-wage manufacturing industries. All 50 states experience net job losses, with California losing 82,354 jobs, followed by Michigan, New York, Texas, and Ohio each losing over 20,000 jobs. The agreement particularly devastates the U.S. auto sector, which loses 350,000 jobs (one-third of the industry) by 2015, while Mexican auto employment surges from 120,000 to 550,000 workers. NAFTA contributes to rising income inequality, suppresses real wages for production workers, weakens collective bargaining power and union organizing ability, and reduces fringe benefits. The agreement demonstrates how neoliberal trade policy prioritizes corporate profit expansion over worker protections, creating a race-to-the-bottom dynamic that will be replicated in subsequent trade agreements and establishing a template for corporate-friendly globalization that systematically transfers wealth from labor to capital.