Truro News

NAFTA talks to start late in the year: U.S. commerce secretary

- ThE cANADIAN pRESS

WAShINGtoN

NAFTA negotiatio­ns will probably start late this year, might take about a year, and will include serious changes that could include the addition of several entire new chapters to the landmark agreement.

That’s according to U.S. Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross, tasked to lead the process by President Donald Trump, who has previously indicated he expects only minor tweaks to the trade relationsh­ip with Canada.

“The Mexicans know, the Canadians know, everybody knows, times are different. We are going to have new trade relations with people,” Ross told a Bloomberg broadcast interview Wednesday.

“And they all know they’re going to have to make concession­s. The only question is what’s the magnitude, and what’s the form of the concession­s.”

Ross credited the president for tough talk that he says has prepared the other countries to make concession­s: “He’s made my job easier by softening up the adverse parties. What could be better than going into a trade negotiatio­n where the fellow on the other side knows he has to make concession­s?”

In the interview, Ross revealed multiple aspects of his thinking on the upcoming renegotiat­ions of the seminal 1993 agreement with Canada and Mexico.

Two questions have lingered: whether the U.S. would seek minor administra­tive changes or more substantiv­e ones, which would involve a vote and consultati­ons with U.S. Congress; and if the latter, when the 90-day consultati­on period would begin.

Yes, he intends to involve Congress, and no, it won’t happen right away, Ross said. The U.S. has yet to get its entire cabinet confirmed, including the U.S. Trade Representa­tive, who is the legally designated point of contact with Congress.

“You’re talking probably the latter part of this year before real negotiatio­ns get underway,” Ross said.

“(Then) I think the negotiatio­ns hopefully won’t take more than a year.”

Ross says he has an open mind on another question – whether the final deal should be a three-country arrangemen­t or two bilateral ones.

As for the substance, he says there will be significan­t changes. He hoped to add entire new chapters to the agreement, including one related to the digital economy.

“It’s an old treaty. Our economy is very different from what it was when that treaty was when that treaty was entered into,” he said.

“There were some things in (the original) that were missed. There were things in it that were not done correctly to begin with. And a lot of things that might have been OK back then but don’t work now. So there’s a lot to fix.” Nineteen asylum-seekers braved a fierce overnight blizzard to cross into Canada via Emerson Road, shown here, near the Manitoba border community, the area’s reeve said Wednesday.

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Cp photo

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