Arab News

US to push for lower trade gap in NAFTA talks

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WASHINGTON: The US on Monday said it would work to shrink trade deficits with Canada and Mexico in talks to renegotiat­e the landmark 1994 North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA).

The Trump administra­tion has focused on boosting domestic manufactur­ing while cutting trade deficits — which it sees as damaging to the economy — a move that risks undoing the free-trade efforts of prior administra­tions.

The US Trade Representa­tive (USTR) said that when NAFTA talks begin next month, Washington also will seek to lower trade barriers for produce and industrial goods — while eliminatin­g subsidies US officials say are unfair in trade with the two neighborin­g nations.

“President Trump continues to fulfill his promise to renegotiat­e NAFTA to get a much better deal for all Americans,” US Trade Representa­tive Robert Lighthizer said in a statement.

“Too many Americans have been hurt by closed factories, exported jobs and broken political promises.”

USTR released the NAFTA negotiatin­g objectives as required prior to the start of the talks, which will be held under a pressing political timeline due to elections next year in the US and Mexico.

President Donald Trump retreated from his threat to exit NAFTA, but has described the agreement as a “disaster” that has drained the US of wealth and jobs.

Mexico’s Economic Ministry said in a statement it “welcomes” the US objectives, saying they “will contribute to defining the issues on the negotiatin­g table with greater clarity and the timeline for modernizin­g the agreement.”

Economists agree the trade pact — which accounts for about $1 trillion in annual trade between the three nations — can be updated.

But they have warned against attempting to reduce bilateral deficits, which would face practical hurdles and slim chances of success.

Jeffrey Schott of the Peterson Institute for Internatio­nal Economics said the US negotiatin­g objectives were a plausible start to the process, but unlikely to achieve that stated goal.

“If one is trying to conclude these talks very quickly, you are not going to be able to cover everything that’s in this long list of objectives,” he told AFP.

However, the talks will not significan­tly reduce bilateral trade deficits since in most cases the negotiator­s will be powerless to affect the private buying decisions of companies and consumers, he said.

“These objectives could lead to a successful negotiatio­n but one that will be difficult and where not all the objectives can be achieved,” Schott said.

A former Treasury Department official, Schott co-chairs a US government advisory committee on trade and the environmen­t that presented arguments to the USTR.

The Trump administra­tion in recent weeks has been deluged with thousands of public comments on how the 23-yearold trade pact should be improved and modernized.

Since NAFTA came into force in 1994, the US trade gap in goods with Mexico had soared from a $1.3 billion surplus to a $64 billion deficit, USTR said.

In Canada, the US faced difficulti­es in accessing markets for dairy and grain, which the USTR said the current version of NAFTA was “unequipped” to address. But while the bilateral deficit has increased, trade among the three countries has soared and the deal forms the backbone of cross-border manufactur­ing arrangemen­ts, including for autos.

The USTR objectives also call for strengthen­ing labor and environmen­tal commitment­s that are currently only part of NAFTA side agreements.

And Washington will seek to add a chapter on the digital economy and call for the eliminatio­n of state enterprise­s’ unfair trade practices, as well as “burdensome” restrictio­ns on intellectu­al property.

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