The Borneo Post

NAFTA talks moving at ‘warp speed’

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WASHINGTON: Negotiator­s are moving swiftly to revamp the North American Free Trade Agreement but the outcome remains uncertain, US Trade Representa­tive Robert Lighthizer said.

“We’re moving at warp speed but we don’t know whether we’re going to get a conclusion,” he said.

The remarks following a speech on trade policy came days ahead of the third round of talks aimed at reworking NAFTA, which are due to kick off Saturday in Canada.

US President Donald Trump last month again called the future of NAFTA into doubt, saying he would ‘probably’ terminate the agreement “at some point.”

Despite a campaign promise to abandon the trade pact, Trump opted instead to call for talks to renegotiat­e it, but has signalled

We’re moving at warp speed but we don’t know whether we’re going to get a conclusion. Robert Lighthizer, US Trade Representa­tive

several times he is willing to terminate it if he does not get a good deal.

Lighthizer said Monday officials are eager to conclude the talks due to time pressures from the political calendar, notably in Mexico, which will hold general elections in July, and because uncertaint­y was inconvenie­ncing businesses.

“There are a lot of people that the whole process is having real-life effects on, real farmers and ranchers and businesspe­ople who are trying to do business,” said Lighthizer.

“So there are reasons to move quickly on a renegotiat­ion.”

Trump officials have put heavy emphasis on reducing bilateral trade deficits in all of its discussion­s, including with NAFTA partners Canada and Mexico, something analysts say may be difficult to remedy in trade talks.

Turning to China, Lighthizer said the World Trade Organizati­on was not equipped to respond to the ‘unpreceden­ted’ threat from Beijing’s policies.

“The sheer scale of their coordinate­d efforts to develop their economy, to subsidize, to create national champions, to force technology transfer and to distort markets in China and throughout the world is a threat to the world trading system that is unpreceden­ted,” he said.

Lighthizer said he did not want to ‘prejudge’ the outcome a pending US investigat­ion into Chinese intellectu­al property policies, but there is “an awful lot to indicate there’s a problem.”

The Trump administra­tion this month blocked Chinese efforts to acquire a US semiconduc­tor firm in Oregon due to national security issues, partly because of concerns about forced transfer of sensitive technology.

Washington has also cited national security in launching probes of Chinese steel and aluminium production. — AFP

 ??  ?? USTrade Representa­tive Robert Lighthizer listening to a question during a press conference on the third and last day of the second round of NAFTA talks in Mexico City. Negotiator­s are moving swiftly to revamp the North American Free Trade Agreement but...
USTrade Representa­tive Robert Lighthizer listening to a question during a press conference on the third and last day of the second round of NAFTA talks in Mexico City. Negotiator­s are moving swiftly to revamp the North American Free Trade Agreement but...

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