The Borneo Post (Sabah)

US Commerce chief sees no major NAFTA talks until later this year

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WASHINGTON: US Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross said that substantia­l negotiatio­ns to revamp the North American Free Trade Agreement likely will not get started until the latter part of this year and could take a year to complete.

Ross, speaking to Bloomberg Television, said US legal notificati­on requiremen­ts with partners Mexico and Canada create some built-in delays to the start of substantia­l discussion­s.

“You’re talking probably the latter part of this year before the real negotiatio­ns get underway,” Ross said.

The 79-year-old billionair­e investor, who was sworn into his job just last week, said he hoped the renegotiat­ions could be completed within a year, but it was unclear how long it would take to see benefits like a smaller US trade deficit with Mexico.

He said the NAFTA renegotiat­ion would be ‘complex,’ with more than 20 chapters in the 23year-old agreement that needed to be modernized, along with new chapters such as those covering the digital economy and other sectors that did not exist in the early 1990s.

Without a US Trade Representa­tive in office, Ross is taking the lead on trade negotiatio­n issues in the early weeks of the Trump administra­tion.

In Detroit last week, Mexican economy minister Ildefonso Guajardo said he was hopeful that Mexico, Canada and the United States could begin discussion­s in June to ‘modernise’ NAFTA, stressing that Mexico would not accept tariffs.

A less belligeren­t US tone towards Mexican trade in recent weeks has lifted the Mexican peso from historic lows of about 22 to the dollar in January to about 19.6.

But Ross said on Wednesday that Mexico would have to make some concession­s to the United States.

President Donald Trump during his election campaign threatened to slap 35 per cent tariffs on Mexican imports.

He is studying a House Republican proposal for a border tax adjustment system that would levy a 20 per cent tax on all imports while exempting exports.

The plan is partly aimed at offsetting value-added taxes charged on imports by Mexico and many other countries.

Ross said Trump “has made my job a lot easier by softening up the adverse parties. What could be better than going into a negotiatio­n where the fellow on the other side knows he has to make concession­s?”

The new Commerce secretary also said he was not concerned about starting trade wars, because the United States was already fighting one.

“We’ve been in a trade war for decades,” he said. “The difference is now our troops are coming to the ramparts.”

 ?? — Reuters photo ?? Trucks wait in a queue for the border customs control to cross into US at the World Trade Bridge in Nuevo Laredo, Mexico. US Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross said that substantia­l negotiatio­ns to revamp the North American Free Trade Agreement likely will...
— Reuters photo Trucks wait in a queue for the border customs control to cross into US at the World Trade Bridge in Nuevo Laredo, Mexico. US Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross said that substantia­l negotiatio­ns to revamp the North American Free Trade Agreement likely will...

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