Khaleej Times

Cautious optimism on Nafta

- Anthony Esposito and Lesley Wroughton

mexico city/washington — Top US and Mexican officials on Thursday expressed cautious optimism that the North American Free Trade Agreement will be renegotiat­ed, speaking ahead of the next round of trade talks later this month.

Asked on local television whether it was more likely the $1.2 trillion trilateral trade pact would survive or die, Mexico’s Foreign Minister Luis Videgaray said there was cause for optimism, though Mexico should be prepared for all eventualit­ies. “We should be prepared for a future with or without Nafta,” he said.

In Washington, US Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said it was a priority for the Trump administra­tion to renegotiat­e Nafta, declining to speculate on the consequenc­es if the United States withdraws from talks. The seventh round of negotiatio­ns in Mexico City will take place February 25 thru March 5, starting and ending a day earlier than initially planned.

There is a “window of opportunit­y” for concluding the talks in March or April, said Moises Kalach, head of the internatio­nal negotiatin­g arm of Mexico’s CCE business lobby. “That’s the objective,” Kalach told reporters.

Talks to renegotiat­e the 1994 pact have stalled as Canada and Mexico are at loggerhead­s with the United States over some of the most contentiou­s proposals its negotiator­s have put on the table. “I am cautiously hopeful that [US Trade Representa­tive] Ambassador Lighthizer will be renegotiat­ing this deal,” Mnuchin told the House Ways and Means Committee, which has jurisdicti­on over trade matters in the US Congress.

“It is a major priority of ours,” Mnuchin added.

US President Donald Trump has called Nafta one of the worst deals in history, blaming it for US manufactur­ing job losses, and has threatened to quit the agreement unless he can rework it to better suit US interests. His remarks have unsettled financial markets.

At the last round in Montreal, Canada made several proposals to address the US insistence on raising the North American content of autos. Washington also wants a clause that would allow any member to withdraw after five years.

The early March deadline for concluding talks has been extended to at least early April, officials have said. But participan­ts have conceded privately it could take months longer. —

 ?? AFP ?? US Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said it was a priority for the Trump administra­tion to renegotiat­e Nafta. —
AFP US Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said it was a priority for the Trump administra­tion to renegotiat­e Nafta. —

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates