Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Mexico rejects US trade deal proposals on steel, aluminium

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MEXICOCITY: Mexico’s foreign minister has said the country would not accept a US proposal for steel and aluminium production under the new trade deal, saying it would leave Mexico at a disadvanta­ge.

During a meeting with senators to discuss details of negotiatio­ns for the United States-mexico-canada treaty (USMCA), Foreign Minister Marcelo Ebrard said the US proposed that 70% of steel for automobile production come from the North American region.

The proposal would put Mexico “at a very great disadvanta­ge,” said Ebrard, because cars produced in Mexico also use components made in Brazil, Japan and Germany.

Ebrard said the Mexican delegation will ask at the next meeting of treaty representa­tives that the provision come into effect “more than five years” after the start of the trade pact, rather than immediatel­y.

Mexico will also not accept “any term” for aluminium provisions, Ebrard said, because they do not have the resources to produce aluminium.

Mexico is one of the world’s largest automobile exporters due to multiple brands - including General Motors, Nissan, FiatChrysl­er and Volkswagen - building facilities in the country.

Ebrard’s comments come just a few days after after Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador said he would not accept a US proposal for superviser­s to oversee the implementa­tion of Mexico’s labour reforms under the USMCA.

Mexico is the only country so far to ratify the new deal, negotiated at US President Donald Trump’s behest to replace the 25-year-old North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), which he considers “a disaster” for the United States.

In a bid to comply with its commitment­s under the new deal, which was signed in November 2018, Mexico has raised its minimum wage and passed labour reforms. AFP

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