The Manila Times

NAFTA talks open amid difference­s, expectatio­ns

- AFP

WASHINGTON, D.C.: Negotiator­s from Canada, Mexico and the United Wednesday to revamp the 23-yearold regional free trade agreement some see as a demon and others as a savior.

Between those extremes, there are high expectatio­ns but vastly different views on how to remake the North American Free Trade Agreement into a deal that pleases all sides, and ful repeated campaign promises to help US workers.

Trump famously denounced NAFTA as “the worst trade deal maybe ever signed anywhere,” and promised to pull out of the agreement he said has destroyed US jobs, but succumbed to pressure to renegotiat­e instead.

Given recent criticism over his handling of North Korea, Venezuela and the white supremacis­t violence in Charlottes­ville, Virginia, Trump will need to have something he can call a victory out of the talks.

However, he recently warned again that he will “terminate NAFTA” if “we don’t get the deal we want.”

While some view statements like this from Trump as bombast, Fred Bergsten, director emeritus of the Peterson Institute for Internatio­nal Economics, warned, “Failure is an option.”

“We don’t like to say that, we don’t like to think about it, but it’s true,” he said, warning of serious consequenc­es to the US economy.

Even with that threat hanging over the talks, negotiator­s are go of negotiatio­ns optimistic about updating the pact that was signed before the internet was a force, and covers a market of nearly 500 million people.

Large negotiatin­g teams from Canada, Mexico and the United States will meet through Sunday to develop the new text of the pact. They are due to reconvene September 5 in Mexico City.

The timeline for the talks is expected to be aggressive, given elections in Mexico in July 2018, as well as the US legislativ­e calendar.

A USTR official confirmed plans to add a chapter on digital trade, as well as incorporat­ing side agreements added after the fact on environmen­tal and labor standards.

Canada also has stressed the need for stronger labor and environmen­tal rules in the agreement.

For the White House, however, the central focus is on changing NAFTA rules to reduce the US manufactur­ing jobs.

“The deficit is a large issue that we will have to address, and intend to address, in a compre told reporters.

“Our starting point for the negotiatio­n of the NAFTA is to get a more balanced, reciprocal trade agreement that supports more high-paying jobs for Americans and grows the US economy.”

Although US trade with Mexico shifted from a $1.7 billion surplus in 2016, during that period total trade with Canada and Mexico more than tripled, reaching $1.2 trillion by last year.

Economists argue that a free trade agreement is not the place to address a bilateral trade imbal could become a key sticking point in the talks, since reduc cutting imports from Mexico or increasing exports.

Another likely source of dispute is Washington’s desire to eliminate an infrequent­ly used dispute resolution process under which a NAFTA panel can overrule individual countries’ decisions on dumping and unfair subsidies.

Washington views Chapter 19 as unfair, since it can overrule decisions made by US agencies on imports thought to receive unfair subsidies.

But for Canada especially, which has successful­ly used the process in the longstandi­ng timber dispute with the United States, Chapter 19 is not negotiable.

And Mexico’s Congress passed a resolution last month calling for negotiator­s to resist any move to eliminate the mechanism.

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