Kuwait Times

NAFTA future iffy going into new round of negotiatio­ns

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MONTREAL: Negotiator­s from Canada, Mexico and the United States tomorrow will kick off the sixth round of talks aimed at revamping the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) in Montreal. The six days of talks come amid high trade tensions between Ottawa and Washington and as US President Donald Trump insists Mexico will pay for the constructi­on of a controvers­ial wall along the US’s southern border.

Trump continues to blow hot and cold on the continenta­l trade pact that he has threatened to repeal, and recently said in a Twitter message that “NAFTA is a bad joke.” Outraged by huge anti-dumping and countervai­ling duties imposed on Canadian aircraft manufactur­er Bombardier as well as its primary softwood lumber and newsprint exporters, Ottawa recently filed a complaint with the World Trade Organizati­on alleging widespread trade violations by its neighbor.

The government of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is aiming for a repeat of past adjudicati­ons that went Canada’s way to turn the tide against rising US protection­ism. In line with his campaign commitment, Trump forced Canada and Mexico to the table to renegotiat­e the 1994 free trade pact, promising to bring back US

manufactur­ing jobs and update NAFTA for the digital age. Talks to modernize what Canadian Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland called “the largest free trade area in the world” were originally scheduled to wrap up by the end of 2017. But the parties have agreed to continue negotiatin­g until March.

Despite significan­t progress on so-called “bread and butter” issues, Freeland said Canada is bracing for “the worst,” including a possible US withdrawal from NAFTA that would effectivel­y mean the end of the tripartite trade pact. While often railing against NAFTA, Trump has at times also seemed to soften his view, telling the Wall Street Journal he would be “a little bit flexible” on his threat to withdraw because of the upcoming Mexican presidenti­al election on July 1.

Although he failed to mention the upcoming US midterm elections, these must also weigh on mind.

No ‘dance partner’

In Montreal, trade envoys are due to tackle some 28 outstandin­g concerns, including thorny issues such as the proportion of US content in passenger vehicles and parts. “I think the concern that a lot of people have is that so little progress have been made and so little effort is being made by the Americans that you worry that they are... just positionin­g for Trump to be able to say ‘We are out,’” former Conservati­ve leader Rona Ambrose told broadcaste­r CTV.

“When you don’t have a dance partner on the other side, it becomes really difficult,” said Ambrose, who was appointed by Trudeau to Canada’s NAFTA advisory council. A former Conservati­ve industry minister, James Moore, however, struck a more optimistic tone after current Tory leader Andrew Scheer and several MPs returned this week from lobbying Washington decision makers on NAFTA.

He sees possible trade-offs on access to government procuremen­t and rules of origin for the auto sector, which Trump wants to restrict to better favor the United States. — AFP

 ??  ?? WASHINGTON: This file photo shows Canadian Foreign Minister Chrystia Freeland during a press conference at the conclusion of the fourth round of negotiatio­ns for a new North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) at the General Services Administra­tion...
WASHINGTON: This file photo shows Canadian Foreign Minister Chrystia Freeland during a press conference at the conclusion of the fourth round of negotiatio­ns for a new North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) at the General Services Administra­tion...

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