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Ministers from the United States, Canada and Mexico meet on Monday to
wrap up the latest round of NAFTA talks under the shadow of U.S.
President Donald Trump’s proposed steep tariffs on steel and aluminum
imports.
Officials have so far been evasive when asked how the three nations can continue trying to update the North American Free Trade Agreement at a time when the U.S. president is about to take a highly protectionist measure.
The NAFTA talks are going slowly and the Mexico City round -
the seventh of eight planned sets of negotiations - produced little of
substance.
Trump is expected to finalize the tariffs - 25 percent on
steel and 10 percent on aluminum - later in the week, posing a tough
challenge for U.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer, Canada’s
Foreign Minister Chrystia Freeland and Mexican Economy Minister
Ildefonso Guajardo.
The Mexican and Canadian ministers
are likely to press Trump’s trade envoy on whether their countries will
be excluded from the blanket tariffs.
Officials have so far been evasive when asked how the three nations can continue trying to update the North American Free Trade Agreement at a time when the U.S. president is about to take a highly protectionist measure.
Brady led a delegation of U.S. lawmakers to Mexico City to
press officials on the need to conclude the talks, which have unnerved
financial markets worried about the possibility that the North American
supply chain could be disrupted.
Eight days of talks in Mexico’s capital
failed to make headway on new rules governing the content of products
made in North America, which has been one of the most contentious issues
in the talks.
The U.S. negotiator charged with
overseeing the so-called rules of origin unexpectedly returned to
Washington for consultations early on and did not return. Talks on the
matter will be rescheduled before the expected next proper NAFTA round
in Washington in early April.
Still, Brady said he was
impressed with the progress made during the week, emphasizing it was
important to finish negotiating a modern, pro-growth agreement that
would boost manufacturing and jobs.
U.S. Representative
Roger Marshall, a Republican who traveled with Brady to Mexico, said
meetings during the week had closed chapters related to chemicals,
communications and anti-corruption efforts.
Dave
Solverson, a former president of the Canadian Cattlemen’s Association,
said the NAFTA region could not afford a trade war, especially when
attempting to renegotiate the 24-year-old trade deal.
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