The Borneo Post

NAFTA deal ‘fairly close,’ Trump says

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WASHINGTON: President Donald Trump said negotiator­s were ‘fairly close’ to resolving their difference­s over the future of the North American Free Trade Agreement but an outright US withdrawal was still possible.

Officials in Washington and Mexico City have played down expectatio­ns a deal could be unveiled later this week when representa­tives of the US, Canada and Mexico attend the Summit of the Americas in Peru.

“We’ve made tremendous progress. We’re fairly close on NAFTA,” Trump said at the White House.

“If we don’t make the right deal, we’ll terminate NAFTA and make the right deal after that.”

Trump’s repeated threats to exit NAFTA have unnerved US industry and members of his fellow Republican Party who say the 24-year-old trade pact has benefited American industry and agricultur­e.

But Trump rose to the White House on a tide of economic nationalis­m and has called NAFTA a “disaster” that has destroyed US jobs.

Canadian and Mexican officials have balked at American demands to raise US content requiremen­ts in auto-manufactur­ing, scrap a dispute resolution mechanism and put a five-year “sunset” clause on the trade agreement.

However, officials have sounded optimistic following recent talks, citing progress in reaching common ground.

“At this point, we don’t anticipate substantiv­e discussion­s on NAFTA at the summit,” a White House official told AFP on condition of anonymity ahead of the summit, which kicks of Friday in Lima.

Mexican Economy Minister Ildefonso Guajardo also said Monday the odds of reaching a deal by early May were high – thus ruling out an agreement this week.

“There is a very high probabilit­y – 80 per cent,” Guajardo told Mexican TV network Televisa.

Trump on Monday also acknowledg­ed the escalating US confrontat­ion with major trading partners could have painful blowback for the US agricultur­al sector.

Farm groups have lobbied fiercely against the Trump’s plans to impose tariffs on Chinese and European exports, saying retaliatio­n by those countries could hurt US farm states the most.

Responding to US tariffs on aluminium and steel, China has put tariffs on US pork and other exports and has threatened to do likewise for US soybeans, a third of which are exported annually to the giant Asian market. — AFP

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