The Borneo Post

Facing Trump trade threats, Mexico eyes new partners

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MEXICO CITY: Facing US President Donald Trump’s protection­ist threats, Mexico is looking to expand trade ties with Europe and Asia, but reducing its dependence on the massive US market will be tough.

Mexico and the European Union agreed on Wednesday to speed up negotiatio­ns to modernise an existing free trade pact in which 53 billion euros (US$57 billion) in goods were exchanged in 2015.

At the same time, the government said it planned to negotiate a free trade agreement with Britain once the island exits the EU.

“It’s good for Mexico to turn toward other places, but I wouldn’t declare NAFTA dead,” said Gabriela Siller, director of economic analysis at the Mexican financial group BASE.

On Wednesday, the government launched a 90-day period of consultati­ons with the private sector to prepare its strategy for negotiatio­ns with the United States and Canada, which are expected to start in May.

The negotiatio­ns promise to be rough.

While Trump said he was willing to renegotiat­e rather than scrap NAFTA, he called the deal a “catastroph­e” for the United States.

For his part, Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto promised at a meeting of agricultur­al industry leaders that he would steadfastl­y defend the interests of Mexicans during the negotiatio­ns.

With NAFTA under threat, China appears as an attractive alternativ­e with its massive market of 1.37 billion people.

On Wednesday, the government unveiled a US$212 million joint investment between Chinese automaker JAC Motors and Mexico’s Giant Motors to build SUVs in the central state of Hidalgo for the domestic market and exports to Latin America.

The JAC deal comes as Trump has threatened to impose stiff tariffs on car companies that ships US jobs to Mexico.

Ford Motors decided last month to cancel a US$1.6 billion new factory project in northern Mexico. Though the company said it was simply a business decision, many in Mexico saw it as a consequenc­e of Trump’s threats.

“When you can’t look only to the north, you can look to the east,” said Hidalgo’s governor, Omar Fayad.

Even though the two countries do not have a free trade pact, China is Mexico’s second biggest trade partner, with US$75 billion in goods exchanged in 2015.

But the trade balance is unfavorabl­e to Mexico, which imports 14 times more from China than it exports to the Asian country.

“If this was a football game, they outscore us badly,” said Enrique Dussel, coordinato­r of the China-Mexico Studies Center at the National Autonomous University of Mexico.

Dussel said he was “skeptical and cautious” about the idea of Mexico turning to China to diversify its foreign investment­s and trade.

The situation has been “extremely tense,” with failed investment­s and disputes at the World Trade Organizati­on related to the textile, steel and toy industries.

Pena Nieto has visited China several times since taking office in 2012, while a strategic partnershi­p was signed during Chinese President Xi Jinping’s visit to Mexico in 2013. — AFP

 ??  ?? Trucks wait in a long queue for border customs control to cross into the US at the Otay border crossing in Tijuana, Mexico. Facing US President Donald Trump’s protection­ist threats, Mexico is looking to expand trade ties with Europe and Asia, but...
Trucks wait in a long queue for border customs control to cross into the US at the Otay border crossing in Tijuana, Mexico. Facing US President Donald Trump’s protection­ist threats, Mexico is looking to expand trade ties with Europe and Asia, but...

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