Santa Fe New Mexican

Mexico eyes swift NAFTA rewrite as Trump eases rhetoric

- By Erik Schatzker, Nacha Cattan and Charlie Devereux

Mexico’s top trade negotiator said he was heartened by a retreat from more protection­ist rhetoric in the U.S. and that talks to redo the North American Free Trade Agreement may conclude as soon as January.

Economy Minister Ildefonso Guajardo said the date would depend on the administra­tion of President Donald Trump notifying Congress in time for negotiatio­ns to begin by the end of July.

“The U.S. has to trigger the mechanism,” Guajardo said in an interview with Bloomberg TV’s Erik Schatzker in Buenos Aires. “What I keep hearing is that after Congress comes back from recess they will be able to be notified by the end of April.” In that case talks can start by the end of July, followed by “six months of negotiatio­ns, and then we send it to the legislativ­e branch for them to approve it.”

Investors have shed their doomsday outlook on Mexico in recent weeks after White House officials said that both Mexico and the U.S. stand to benefit from a renegotiat­ion of the North American Free Trade Agreement.

The peso has rebounded from a record low in January and is now the best performer of all currencies tracked by Bloomberg, and companies that had put investment­s on hold as then-candidate Trump railed against NAFTA are racing back into the country.

“It will be in the best interest of both countries involved to make this process very efficient,” Guajardo said, noting that Mexico has presidenti­al elections in mid-2018 and the U.S. has a midterm vote in November of next year.

Still, Guajardo warned that even minor changes may be difficult to negotiate. On one of those changes, raising the average percentage of auto inputs that must be made in the North American region to 70 percent from 62.5 percent seems reasonable, Guajardo said on the sidelines of the World Economic Forum’s Latin America meeting in Buenos Aires. However, pushing it to 95 percent would be extreme and hurt the region’s competitiv­eness.

“Mexico will be willing to buy more from the U.S.,” Guajardo said. “We can make an additional effort as long as you have the supply process already in place to be able to supply in Mexico at a competitiv­e cost.”

The Trump administra­tion has softened its rhetoric notably from January, when then President-elect Trump tweeted that he’ll slap heavy taxes on businesses that move jobs to Mexico. Since then, Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin has said redoing NAFTA could spell a win-win for both sides.

Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross said he anticipate­s a sensible deal, and Peter Navarro, who leads the White House National Trade Council, said he wants Canada, Mexico and the U.S. to become a global manufactur­ing powerhouse.

Some of Trump’s early stumbles, such as the collapse of the healthcare bill and court orders against two attempts at a travel ban have also underscore­d how hard it is to make any drastic changes in Washington.

For example, House Speaker Paul Ryan has been pushing to replace corporate income tax with a tax on businesses’ domestic sales and imports, exempting exports. The border adjustment tax proposal raised alarm bells among importers in the U.S., as well as government officials in Mexico as they feared it would reduce shipments north of the border. But support for the measure has waned in Washington.

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