Dayton Daily News

NAFTA talks end amid wage disputes

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The second round of talks on renegotiat­ing the North American Free Trade Agreement ended Tuesday amid resistance to discussing Mexico’s low wages and large difference­s over dispute resolution mechanisms.

The head negotiator­s for all three countries at the talks in Mexico City said progress had been made, but U.S. Trade Representa­tive Robert E. Lighthizer said some areas were going to be challengin­g.

“There’s no secret that the labor provisions will be

contentiou­s and that it’s our objective to have provisions that raise wage rates in Mexico,” Lighthizer said.

“I think that’s in the interest of Mexicans and in the interest of the United States.” He also said that while the U.S. had proposed eliminatin­g the current dispute resolution mechanism, “we haven’t had any detailed negotiatio­ns” on the system, which is known as Chapter 19.

Text was coming together for most chapters of the treaty, however, including small and medium enterprise­s, competitiv­eness, digital trade, services and the environmen­t. “The strategy is to con

clude in the short term those things that can be concluded” and then tackle the thornier issues, Mexican Economy Secretary Ildefonso Guajardo said. Regarding energy, Gua

jardo said “there are no points of difference or controvers­y.” He said the main question was whether it should have its own chapter or be spread across all chapters.

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